Abstract: Prior research suggests that human children lack an aptitude for tool innovation. However, children’s tool making must be explored across a broader range of tasks and across diverse cultural contexts before we can conclude that they are genuinely poor tool innovators. To this end, we investigated children’s ability to independently construct three new tools using distinct actions: adding, subtracting and reshaping. We tested 422 children across a broad age range from five geographic locations across South Africa (N = 126), Vanuatu (N = 190) and Australia (N = 106), which varied in their levels of exposure to Westernized culture. Children were shown a horizontal, transparent tube that had a sticker in its middle. Children were sequ...
The human capacity for technological innovation and creative problem-solving far surpasses that of a...
© 2021 The Authors. Tool innovation has played a crucial role in human adaptation. Yet, this capacit...
The ability to individually solve a novel problem by modifying objects into a new tool is termed too...
Prior research suggests that human children lack an aptitude for tool innovation. However, children'...
A capacity for constructing new tools, or using old tools in new ways, to solve novel problems is a ...
The present study aimed to investigate two aspects of tool innovation in four-year-old children: inn...
Abstract: Young children typically demonstrate low rates of tool innovation. However, previous studi...
Young children typically demonstrate low rates of tool innovation. However, previous studies have li...
Young children typically demonstrate low rates of tool innovation. However, previous studies have li...
Through the mechanisms of observation, imitation and teaching, young children readily pick up the to...
Through the mechanisms of observation, imitation and teaching, young children readily pick up the to...
Tool making has been proposed as a key force in driving the complexity of human material culture. Th...
AbstractTool innovation—designing and making novel tools to solve tasks—is extremely difficult for y...
Research indicates that in experimental settings, young children of 3–7 years old are unlikely to de...
Children are proficient tool users; however, pre-school children are not proficient in every aspect ...
The human capacity for technological innovation and creative problem-solving far surpasses that of a...
© 2021 The Authors. Tool innovation has played a crucial role in human adaptation. Yet, this capacit...
The ability to individually solve a novel problem by modifying objects into a new tool is termed too...
Prior research suggests that human children lack an aptitude for tool innovation. However, children'...
A capacity for constructing new tools, or using old tools in new ways, to solve novel problems is a ...
The present study aimed to investigate two aspects of tool innovation in four-year-old children: inn...
Abstract: Young children typically demonstrate low rates of tool innovation. However, previous studi...
Young children typically demonstrate low rates of tool innovation. However, previous studies have li...
Young children typically demonstrate low rates of tool innovation. However, previous studies have li...
Through the mechanisms of observation, imitation and teaching, young children readily pick up the to...
Through the mechanisms of observation, imitation and teaching, young children readily pick up the to...
Tool making has been proposed as a key force in driving the complexity of human material culture. Th...
AbstractTool innovation—designing and making novel tools to solve tasks—is extremely difficult for y...
Research indicates that in experimental settings, young children of 3–7 years old are unlikely to de...
Children are proficient tool users; however, pre-school children are not proficient in every aspect ...
The human capacity for technological innovation and creative problem-solving far surpasses that of a...
© 2021 The Authors. Tool innovation has played a crucial role in human adaptation. Yet, this capacit...
The ability to individually solve a novel problem by modifying objects into a new tool is termed too...