How do children decide which elements of an action demonstration are important to reproduce in the context of an imitation game? We tested whether selective imitation of a demonstrator’s actions may be based on the same search for relevance that drives adult interpretation of ostensive communication. Three groups of 18-month-old infants were shown a toy animal either hopping or sliding (action style) into a toy house (action outcome), but the communicative relevance of the action style differed depending on the group. For the no prior information group, all the information in the demonstration was new and so equally relevant. However, for infants in the ostensive prior information group, the potential action outcome was already communicated...
This study explored different gradations of emulation in the imitation of actions on objects by 17-m...
Recently, researchers have been debating whether infants' selective imitative learning is primarily ...
Gergely, Bekkering, and Kirdly (2002) demonstrated that 14-month-old infants engage in "rational imi...
How do children decide which elements of an action demonstration are important to reproduce in the c...
Sensitivity to relevance 2 How do children decide which elements of an action demonstration are impo...
We investigated whether the tendency to imitate or emulate is influenced by the availability of caus...
Child-directed cues support imitation of novel actions at 18 months, but not at two years of age. Th...
Child-directed cues support imitation of novel actions at 18 months, but not at two years of age. Th...
Two studies were conducted to investigate how 14- to 16-month-old infants select actions to imitate ...
Human infants have an enormous amount to learn from others to become full-fledged members of their c...
In the context of an imitation game, 12- and 18-month-old infants saw an adult do such things as mak...
Learning about actions requires children to identify the boundaries of an action and its units. Wher...
The transmission of cultural knowledge requires learners to identify what relevant information to re...
Nagai Y, Rohlfing K. Can Motionese Tell Infants and Robots "What to Imitate"? In: The 4th Internati...
An imitation procedure was used to investigate the impact of demonstrator familiarity and language c...
This study explored different gradations of emulation in the imitation of actions on objects by 17-m...
Recently, researchers have been debating whether infants' selective imitative learning is primarily ...
Gergely, Bekkering, and Kirdly (2002) demonstrated that 14-month-old infants engage in "rational imi...
How do children decide which elements of an action demonstration are important to reproduce in the c...
Sensitivity to relevance 2 How do children decide which elements of an action demonstration are impo...
We investigated whether the tendency to imitate or emulate is influenced by the availability of caus...
Child-directed cues support imitation of novel actions at 18 months, but not at two years of age. Th...
Child-directed cues support imitation of novel actions at 18 months, but not at two years of age. Th...
Two studies were conducted to investigate how 14- to 16-month-old infants select actions to imitate ...
Human infants have an enormous amount to learn from others to become full-fledged members of their c...
In the context of an imitation game, 12- and 18-month-old infants saw an adult do such things as mak...
Learning about actions requires children to identify the boundaries of an action and its units. Wher...
The transmission of cultural knowledge requires learners to identify what relevant information to re...
Nagai Y, Rohlfing K. Can Motionese Tell Infants and Robots "What to Imitate"? In: The 4th Internati...
An imitation procedure was used to investigate the impact of demonstrator familiarity and language c...
This study explored different gradations of emulation in the imitation of actions on objects by 17-m...
Recently, researchers have been debating whether infants' selective imitative learning is primarily ...
Gergely, Bekkering, and Kirdly (2002) demonstrated that 14-month-old infants engage in "rational imi...