This study explored how overimitation and collaboration interact in 3- to 6-year-old children in Westernized (N = 48 in Experiment 1; N = 26 in Experiment 2) and Indigenous Australian communities (N = 26 in Experiment 2). Whether working in pairs or on their own rates of overimitation did not differ. However, when the causal functions of modeled actions were unclear, the Indigenous Australian children collaborated at enhanced rates compared to the Western children. When the causal role of witnessed actions was identifiable, collaboration rates were correlated with production of causally unnecessary actions, but in the Indigenous Australian children only. This study highlights how children employ imitation and collaboration when acquiring ne...
The effects of action complexity and familiarity on preschooler's imitation performance were inv...
Children grow up in environments saturated with tools and objects which they must learn to use. One ...
This study examines children's reflections on cultural patterns for organizing learning as seen in t...
This study explored how overimitation and collaboration interact in 3- to 6-year-old children in Wes...
Abstract: This study explored how overimitation and collaboration interact in 3 to 6-year-old childr...
Children often "overimitate," comprehensively copying others' actions despite manifest perceptual cu...
Despite experimental and ethnographic evidence of imitation in the context of skill-based or instrum...
Extensive research has documented that the antisocial behavior of others influences children's perce...
Children are surrounded by objects that they must learn to use. One of the most efficient ways child...
Children from Western industrialized populations tend to copy actions modeled by an adult with high ...
This study investigated the patterns of collaboration and communication related to maternal educatio...
This study examined cultural differences in children's collaborative processes and explored the rela...
This study examined cultural differences in children's collaborative processes and explored the rela...
The tendency to imitate causally irrelevant actions is termed overimitation. Here we investigated (a...
The phenomenon of “over-imitation”—the copying of causally irrelevant actions—has influenced researc...
The effects of action complexity and familiarity on preschooler's imitation performance were inv...
Children grow up in environments saturated with tools and objects which they must learn to use. One ...
This study examines children's reflections on cultural patterns for organizing learning as seen in t...
This study explored how overimitation and collaboration interact in 3- to 6-year-old children in Wes...
Abstract: This study explored how overimitation and collaboration interact in 3 to 6-year-old childr...
Children often "overimitate," comprehensively copying others' actions despite manifest perceptual cu...
Despite experimental and ethnographic evidence of imitation in the context of skill-based or instrum...
Extensive research has documented that the antisocial behavior of others influences children's perce...
Children are surrounded by objects that they must learn to use. One of the most efficient ways child...
Children from Western industrialized populations tend to copy actions modeled by an adult with high ...
This study investigated the patterns of collaboration and communication related to maternal educatio...
This study examined cultural differences in children's collaborative processes and explored the rela...
This study examined cultural differences in children's collaborative processes and explored the rela...
The tendency to imitate causally irrelevant actions is termed overimitation. Here we investigated (a...
The phenomenon of “over-imitation”—the copying of causally irrelevant actions—has influenced researc...
The effects of action complexity and familiarity on preschooler's imitation performance were inv...
Children grow up in environments saturated with tools and objects which they must learn to use. One ...
This study examines children's reflections on cultural patterns for organizing learning as seen in t...