Research indicates that in experimental settings, young children of 3–7 years old are unlikely to devise a simple tool to solve a problem. This series of exploratory studies done in museums in the US and UK explores how environment and ownership of materials may improve children's ability and inclination for (i) tool material selection and (ii) innovation. The first study takes place in a children's museum, an environment where children can use tools and materials freely. We replicated a tool innovation task in this environment and found that while 3–4 year olds showed the predicted low levels of innovation rates, 4–7 year olds showed higher rates of innovation than the younger children and than reported in prior studies. The second study e...
AbstractTool innovation—designing and making novel tools to solve tasks—is extremely difficult for y...
The human ability to make tools and use them to solve problems may not be zoologically unique, but i...
International audienceDespite a growing interest in the question of tool-use development in infants,...
Research indicates that in experimental settings, young children of 3–7 years old are unlikely to de...
The present study aimed to investigate two aspects of tool innovation in four-year-old children: inn...
Young children typically demonstrate low rates of tool innovation. However, previous studies have li...
Abstract: Young children typically demonstrate low rates of tool innovation. However, previous studi...
Abstract: Prior research suggests that human children lack an aptitude for tool innovation. However,...
Young children typically demonstrate low rates of tool innovation. However, previous studies have li...
The existing research has demonstrated young children’s difficulty with solving novel tool innovatio...
The human capacity for technological innovation and creative problem-solving far surpasses that of a...
A capacity for constructing new tools, or using old tools in new ways, to solve novel problems is a ...
Low innovation rates have been found with children until 6–8 years of age in tasks that required the...
The purpose of this work is to investigate how 4-5 year olds perceptions of materials and material p...
The ability to individually solve a novel problem by modifying objects into a new tool is termed too...
AbstractTool innovation—designing and making novel tools to solve tasks—is extremely difficult for y...
The human ability to make tools and use them to solve problems may not be zoologically unique, but i...
International audienceDespite a growing interest in the question of tool-use development in infants,...
Research indicates that in experimental settings, young children of 3–7 years old are unlikely to de...
The present study aimed to investigate two aspects of tool innovation in four-year-old children: inn...
Young children typically demonstrate low rates of tool innovation. However, previous studies have li...
Abstract: Young children typically demonstrate low rates of tool innovation. However, previous studi...
Abstract: Prior research suggests that human children lack an aptitude for tool innovation. However,...
Young children typically demonstrate low rates of tool innovation. However, previous studies have li...
The existing research has demonstrated young children’s difficulty with solving novel tool innovatio...
The human capacity for technological innovation and creative problem-solving far surpasses that of a...
A capacity for constructing new tools, or using old tools in new ways, to solve novel problems is a ...
Low innovation rates have been found with children until 6–8 years of age in tasks that required the...
The purpose of this work is to investigate how 4-5 year olds perceptions of materials and material p...
The ability to individually solve a novel problem by modifying objects into a new tool is termed too...
AbstractTool innovation—designing and making novel tools to solve tasks—is extremely difficult for y...
The human ability to make tools and use them to solve problems may not be zoologically unique, but i...
International audienceDespite a growing interest in the question of tool-use development in infants,...