<div><p>Investigation of tool-using behaviours has long been a means by which to explore causal reasoning in children and nonhuman animals. Much of the recent research has focused on the “Aesop’s Fable” paradigm, in which objects must be dropped into water to bring a floating reward within reach. An underlying problem with these, as with many causal reasoning studies, is that functionality information and reward history are confounded: a tool that is functionally useful is also rewarded, while a tool that is not functionally useful is not rewarded. It is therefore not possible to distinguish between behaviours motivated by functional understanding of the properties of the objects involved, and those influenced by reward-history. Here, we de...
<div><p>While humans are able to understand much about causality, it is unclear to what extent non-h...
The ability to infer unseen causes from evidence is argued to emerge early in development and to be ...
Bibliography: pages [48]-51.Learning requires attention to familiar, meaningful events along with ex...
Investigation of tool-using behaviours has long been a means by which to explore causal reasoning in...
The ability to reason about causality underlies key aspects of human cognition, but the extent to wh...
To compare preschool-aged child performance to a study that was recently conducted using great apes ...
Aesop's Fable tasks-in which subjects drop objects into a water-filled tube to raise the water level...
The human ability to make tools and use them to solve problems may not be zoologically unique, but i...
Human children benefit from a possibly unique set of adaptations facilitating the acquisition of kno...
Human and primate tool use has been the focus of intensive research for many decades. Studies with...
We investigated whether children preferentially select informative actions and make accurate inferen...
While humans are able to understand much about causality, it is unclear to what extent non-human ani...
The acquisition of the concept of ‘tool’ remains intriguing from both developmental and comparative ...
While humans are able to understand much about causality, it is unclear to what extent non-human ani...
Human children benefit from a possibly unique set of adaptations facilitating the acquisition of kno...
<div><p>While humans are able to understand much about causality, it is unclear to what extent non-h...
The ability to infer unseen causes from evidence is argued to emerge early in development and to be ...
Bibliography: pages [48]-51.Learning requires attention to familiar, meaningful events along with ex...
Investigation of tool-using behaviours has long been a means by which to explore causal reasoning in...
The ability to reason about causality underlies key aspects of human cognition, but the extent to wh...
To compare preschool-aged child performance to a study that was recently conducted using great apes ...
Aesop's Fable tasks-in which subjects drop objects into a water-filled tube to raise the water level...
The human ability to make tools and use them to solve problems may not be zoologically unique, but i...
Human children benefit from a possibly unique set of adaptations facilitating the acquisition of kno...
Human and primate tool use has been the focus of intensive research for many decades. Studies with...
We investigated whether children preferentially select informative actions and make accurate inferen...
While humans are able to understand much about causality, it is unclear to what extent non-human ani...
The acquisition of the concept of ‘tool’ remains intriguing from both developmental and comparative ...
While humans are able to understand much about causality, it is unclear to what extent non-human ani...
Human children benefit from a possibly unique set of adaptations facilitating the acquisition of kno...
<div><p>While humans are able to understand much about causality, it is unclear to what extent non-h...
The ability to infer unseen causes from evidence is argued to emerge early in development and to be ...
Bibliography: pages [48]-51.Learning requires attention to familiar, meaningful events along with ex...