Fourteen-month-olds’ imitation is influenced more strongly by a model’s competence than by a model’s certainty
•We tested the influence of a model’s certainty and competence on 14-month-olds’ social learning.•We measured infants’ social learning via body-part imitation and tool-choice tasks.•In Exp. 1, infants imitated a competent/uncertain model over an incompetent/certain model.•In contrast, infants did no...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Infant behavior & development 2020-08, Vol.60, p.101458, Article 101458 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •We tested the influence of a model’s certainty and competence on 14-month-olds’ social learning.•We measured infants’ social learning via body-part imitation and tool-choice tasks.•In Exp. 1, infants imitated a competent/uncertain model over an incompetent/certain model.•In contrast, infants did not differentiate between both models when adopting tool choices.•In Exp. 2, a model’s certainty influenced infants’ learning in both tasks.
Research has shown that infants are more likely to learn from certain and competent models than from uncertain and incompetent models. However, it is unknown which of these cues to a model’s reliability infants consider more important. In Experiment 1, we investigated whether 14-month-old infants (n = 35) imitate and adopt tool choices selectively from an uncertain but competent compared to a certain but incompetent model. Infants watched videos in which an adult expressed either uncertainty but acted competently or expressed certainty but acted incompetently with familiar objects. In tool-choice tasks, the adult then chose one of two objects to operate an apparatus, and in imitation tasks, the adult then demonstrated a novel action. Infants did not adopt the model’s choice in the tool-choice tasks but they imitated the uncertain but competent model more often than the certain but incompetent model in the imitation tasks. In Experiment 2, 14-month-olds (n = 33) watched videos in which an adult expressed only either certainty or uncertainty in order to test whether infants at this age are sensitive to a model’s certainty. Infants imitated and adopted the tool choice from a certain model more than from an uncertain model. These results suggest that 14-month-olds acknowledge both a model’s competence and certainty when learning novel actions. However, they rely more on a model’s competence than on his certainty when both cues are in conflict. The ability to detect reliable models when learning how to handle cultural artifacts helps infants to become well-integrated members of their culture. |
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ISSN: | 0163-6383 1879-0453 1934-8800 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.infbeh.2020.101458 |