This work was supported by a John Templeton Foundation grant ID 40128 to AW and K Laland.Over-imitation has become a well-documented phenomenon. However there is evidence that both social and visible, physically causal factors can influence the occurrence of over-imitation in children. Here we explore the interplay between these two factors, manipulating both task opacity and social information. Four- to 7-year-old children were given either a causally opaque or transparent box, before which they experienced either (1) a condition where they witnessed a taught, knowledgeable person demonstrate an inefficient method and an untaught model demonstrate a more efficient method; or (2) a baseline condition where they witnessed efficient and ineff...
This research was supported by an ERC Advanced Investigator grant (EVOCULTURE, Ref: 232823) awarded ...
After seeing an action sequence children and adults tend to copy causally relevant and, more strikin...
High-fidelity copying is critical to the acquisition of culture. However, young children’s high-fide...
Over-imitation has become a well-documented phenomenon. However there is evidence that both social a...
Children copy the actions of others with high fidelity, even when they are not causally relevant. Th...
This research was funded under the Undergraduate Research Internship Programme (URIP) organized by t...
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...
Imitation underlies many traits thought to characterise our species, which includes the transmission...
Imitation underlies many traits thought to characterize our species, which includes the transmission...
The phenomenon of “over-imitation”—the copying of causally irrelevant actions—has influenced researc...
Children imitate actions that are perceivably unnecessary to achieve the instrumental goal of an act...
The writing of this paper was supported by the John Templeton Foundation (grant ID 40128).The curren...
After seeing an action sequence children and adults tend to copy causally relevant and, more strikin...
After seeing an action sequence children and adults tend to copy causally relevant and, more strikin...
This research was supported by an ERC Advanced Investigator grant (EVOCULTURE, Ref: 232823) awarded ...
After seeing an action sequence children and adults tend to copy causally relevant and, more strikin...
High-fidelity copying is critical to the acquisition of culture. However, young children’s high-fide...
Over-imitation has become a well-documented phenomenon. However there is evidence that both social a...
Children copy the actions of others with high fidelity, even when they are not causally relevant. Th...
This research was funded under the Undergraduate Research Internship Programme (URIP) organized by t...
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...
Imitation underlies many traits thought to characterise our species, which includes the transmission...
Imitation underlies many traits thought to characterize our species, which includes the transmission...
The phenomenon of “over-imitation”—the copying of causally irrelevant actions—has influenced researc...
Children imitate actions that are perceivably unnecessary to achieve the instrumental goal of an act...
The writing of this paper was supported by the John Templeton Foundation (grant ID 40128).The curren...
After seeing an action sequence children and adults tend to copy causally relevant and, more strikin...
After seeing an action sequence children and adults tend to copy causally relevant and, more strikin...
This research was supported by an ERC Advanced Investigator grant (EVOCULTURE, Ref: 232823) awarded ...
After seeing an action sequence children and adults tend to copy causally relevant and, more strikin...
High-fidelity copying is critical to the acquisition of culture. However, young children’s high-fide...