原始人事件角色的自发编码。

Q1 Social Sciences
Open Mind Pub Date : 2025-04-22 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1162/opmi_a_00202
Sarah Brocard, Pavel V Voinov, Balthasar Bickel, Klaus Zuberbühler
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在观察社会互动时,人类会迅速而自发地根据行动者、患者和因果关系对事件进行编码。这种倾向可以通过转换成本范式(一种反应时间实验和公认的认知心理学工具)在经验上看到。我们采用了非人类灵长类动物的范式来测试非语言动物是否以同样的方式编码事件角色。人类和非人类参与者都被要求参加两个人工着色(蓝色或绿色)的演员之间的不同社会互动,并瞄准被特定颜色(例如蓝色)掩盖的演员,而不管她的角色是什么。我们发现,当我们将目标颜色面具从代理人切换到患者(反之亦然)时,两种原始人(即人类和黑猩猩)的处理时间都显著增加,这表明事件角色是自发编码的,随后干扰了我们简单的颜色搜索任务。我们得出的结论是,根据代理人和患者对社会事件进行编码的倾向是原始人认知的共同特征,正如几个人类和一个黑猩猩参与者所证明的那样,这表明了一种进化上古老的、在系统上共享的认知机制是语言处理的核心。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Spontaneous Encoding of Event Roles in Hominids.

When observing social interactions, humans rapidly and spontaneously encode events in terms of agents, patients and causal relations. This propensity can be made visible empirically with the switch cost paradigm, a reaction time experiment and well-established tool of cognitive psychology. We adapted the paradigm for non-human primates to test whether non-linguistic animals encoded event roles in the same way. Both human and non-human participants were requested to attend to different social interactions between two artificially coloured (blue or green) actors and to target the actor masked by a specified colour (e.g., blue), regardless of her role. We found that when we switched the targeted colour mask from agents to patients (or vice versa) the processing time significantly increased in both hominid species (i.e., human and chimpanzee), suggesting that event roles were spontaneously encoded and subsequently interfered with our simplistic colour search task. We concluded that the propensity to encode social events in terms of agents and patients was a common feature of hominid cognition, as demonstrated in several human and one chimpanzee participant, pointing towards an evolutionarily old and phylogenetically shared cognitive mechanism central to language processing.

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来源期刊
Open Mind
Open Mind Social Sciences-Linguistics and Language
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
15
审稿时长
53 weeks
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