Children are generally masterful imitators, both rational and flexible in their reproduction of others' actions. After observing an adult operating an unfamiliar object, however, young children will frequently overimitate, reproducing not only the actions that were causally necessary but also those that were clearly superfluous. Why does overimitation occur? We argue that when children observe an adult intentionally acting on a novel object, they may automatically encode all of the adult's actions as causally meaningful. This process of automatic causal encoding (ACE) would generally guide children to accurate beliefs about even highly opaque objects. In situations where some of an adult's intentional actions were unnecessary, however, it w...
Over-imitation has become a well-documented phenomenon. However there is evidence that both social a...
Imitation underlies many traits thought to characterise our species, which includes the transmission...
The primary goal of this study was to investigate cultural transmission in young children, with spec...
Children are generally masterful imitators, both rational and flexible in their reproduction of othe...
Children are generally masterful imitators, both rational and flexible in their reproduction of othe...
Children are generally masterful imitators, both rational and flexible in their reproduction of othe...
Children are generally masterful imitators, both rational and flexible in their reproduction of othe...
Children are generally masterful imitators, both rational and flexible in their reproduction of othe...
Children copy the actions of others with high fidelity, even when they are not causally relevant. Th...
Children copy the actions of others with high fidelity, even when they are not causally relevant. Th...
Children copy the actions of others with high fidelity, even when they are not causally relevant. Th...
SummaryCopying the behaviour of others is important for forming social bonds with other people and f...
Children will reliably reproduce an entire sequence of goal-directed actions modelled to them, even ...
Copying the behaviour of others is important for forming social bonds with other people and for lear...
Copying the behaviour of others is important for forming social bonds with other people and for lear...
Over-imitation has become a well-documented phenomenon. However there is evidence that both social a...
Imitation underlies many traits thought to characterise our species, which includes the transmission...
The primary goal of this study was to investigate cultural transmission in young children, with spec...
Children are generally masterful imitators, both rational and flexible in their reproduction of othe...
Children are generally masterful imitators, both rational and flexible in their reproduction of othe...
Children are generally masterful imitators, both rational and flexible in their reproduction of othe...
Children are generally masterful imitators, both rational and flexible in their reproduction of othe...
Children are generally masterful imitators, both rational and flexible in their reproduction of othe...
Children copy the actions of others with high fidelity, even when they are not causally relevant. Th...
Children copy the actions of others with high fidelity, even when they are not causally relevant. Th...
Children copy the actions of others with high fidelity, even when they are not causally relevant. Th...
SummaryCopying the behaviour of others is important for forming social bonds with other people and f...
Children will reliably reproduce an entire sequence of goal-directed actions modelled to them, even ...
Copying the behaviour of others is important for forming social bonds with other people and for lear...
Copying the behaviour of others is important for forming social bonds with other people and for lear...
Over-imitation has become a well-documented phenomenon. However there is evidence that both social a...
Imitation underlies many traits thought to characterise our species, which includes the transmission...
The primary goal of this study was to investigate cultural transmission in young children, with spec...