Is it personal or is it social? The interaction of knowledge domain and statistical evidence in U.S. and Chinese preschoolers' social generalizations.

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC
ACS Applied Electronic Materials Pub Date : 2024-07-01 Epub Date: 2024-05-02 DOI:10.1037/xge0001605
Teresa Flanagan, Xin Alice Zhao, Fei Xu, Tamar Kushnir
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Abstract

Children make inferences about the social world by observing human actions. However, human actions can be ambiguous: They can be sources of information about personal, idiosyncratic characteristics of individuals or socially shared knowledge. In two cross-cultural studies (N = 420; Mage = 4.05 years, SD = 0.77, 47% female), we ask if U.S. and Chinese children's inferences about whether an action is personal or social vary by domain, statistical evidence, and culture. We did this with a generalization method: Preschoolers learn about one agent's actions and then are asked what they think a new agent will do. Low rates of generalization suggest children inferred something unique to an individual, while high rates suggest that children inferred that the action represented socially shared knowledge. In a mixed between- and within-participant design, children observed agents demonstrate sequences of statistically random (or nonrandom, between participants) actions that were verbally framed as relevant to a particular domain (agent's personal preferences, labels, object functions, or game rules). We found that children's social generalizations about actions were on a continuum: with linguistic conventions (e.g., labels) being the most social, preferences being the most personal, and nonlinguistic conventions (i.e., object functions, game rules) falling somewhere in between. Furthermore, the influence of statistical evidence and cultural variation varied for each domain. These findings highlight how children combine knowledge and evidence to infer social meaning from actions and have implications for rational constructivist accounts of cultural learning. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

是个人行为还是社会行为?中美学龄前儿童社会概括中知识领域与统计证据的相互作用。
儿童通过观察人类行为来推断社会世界。然而,人类行为可能是模棱两可的:它们可能是个人特质的信息来源,也可能是社会共享知识的信息来源。在两项跨文化研究(N = 420;年龄 = 4.05 岁,SD = 0.77,47% 为女性)中,我们询问美国和中国儿童对某一行为是个人行为还是社会行为的推断是否会因领域、统计证据和文化的不同而有所差异。为此,我们采用了概括法:学龄前儿童在了解了一个代理人的行为后,会被问及他们认为一个新的代理人会做什么。概括率低说明儿童推断出了个体独有的东西,而概括率高则说明儿童推断出该行动代表了社会共享知识。在参与者之间和参与者内部的混合设计中,儿童观察代理展示了一系列统计随机(或非随机,在参与者之间)的动作,这些动作被口头描述为与特定领域(代理的个人偏好、标签、对象功能或游戏规则)相关。我们发现,儿童对行动的社会概括是一个连续统一体:语言约定(如标签)是最社会化的,偏好是最个人化的,而非语言约定(即对象功能、游戏规则)则介于两者之间。此外,统计证据和文化差异对每个领域的影响也各不相同。这些发现强调了儿童是如何结合知识和证据从行动中推断社会意义的,并对理性建构主义的文化学习理论产生了影响。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, 版权所有)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.20
自引率
4.30%
发文量
567
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