婴儿期第三方帮助互动的表征

Laura Schlingloff-Nemecz, Denis Tatone, G. Csibra
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引用次数: 0

摘要

尽管人类婴儿从观察第三方帮助互动中得出了许多复杂的推论,但目前还没有理论解释婴儿最初是如何理解这些事件的。在回顾了婴儿的现有证据后,我们描述了人类成年人如何理解帮助行为的描述。根据这一成熟的概念,帮助是一种二级目标导向行为,旨在通过降低成本或增加帮助者自己目标导向行为的回报来增加另一个代理(帮助者)的效用。然后,我们确定了以这种方式构思帮助的认知先决条件,并询问这些条件是否适用于婴儿对帮助互动的解释。与成熟的概念相比,我们提供了两种更简单的选择,可能是早期理解帮助行为的基础:(a)帮助作为使能,需要二阶目标归因,但不需要效用计算;(b)帮助作为联合行动,需要效率(即效用)评估,而不需要二阶目标归因。我们评估了支持这些说法的证据,从中得出独特的预测,并描述了他们设想的成熟概念的发展途径。在文章的最后,我们概述了关于帮助相互作用解释的发展文献尚未解决的进一步开放问题。《发展心理学年度评论》第五卷的最终在线出版日期预计为2023年12月。修订后的估计数请参阅http://www.annualreviews.org/page/journal/pubdates。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Representation of Third-Party Helping Interactions in Infancy
Despite numerous findings on the sophisticated inferences that human infants draw from observing third-party helping interactions, currently there is no theoretical account of how infants come to understand such events in the first place. After reviewing the available evidence in infants, we describe an account of how human adults understand helping actions. According to this mature concept, helping is a second-order, goal-directed action aiming to increase the utility of another agent (the Helpee) via reducing the cost, or increasing the reward, of the Helpee's own goal-directed action. We then identify the cognitive prerequisites for conceiving helping in this way and ask whether these are available to infants in the interpretation of helping interactions. In contrast to the mature concept, we offer two simpler alternatives that may underlie the early understanding of helping actions: ( a) helping as enabling, which requires second-order goal attribution but no utility calculus, and ( b) helping as joint action, which requires efficiency (i.e., utility) evaluation without demanding second-order goal attribution. We evaluate the evidence supporting these accounts, derive unique predictions from them, and describe what developmental pathway toward the mature concept they envisage. We conclude the article by outlining further open questions that the developmental literature on the interpretation of helping interactions has not yet addressed. Expected final online publication date for the Annual Review of Developmental Psychology, Volume 5 is December 2023. Please see http://www.annualreviews.org/page/journal/pubdates for revised estimates.
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