A decade ago, now-seminal work showed that children are strikingly unskilled at simple tool innovation. Since then, a surge of research has replicated these findings across diverse cultures, which has stimulated evocative yet unanswered questions. Humans are celebrated among the animal kingdom for our proclivity to create and use tools and have the most complex and diverse technology on earth. Our capacity for tool use has altered our ecological environments irrevocably. How can we achieve so much, yet tool innovation be such a difficult and late-developing skill for children? In this article, I briefly summarize what we know about the development of tool innovation, then discuss five outstanding questions in the field. With a focus on diff...
Prior research suggests that human children lack an aptitude for tool innovation. However, children'...
Material culture – tools, technology, and instrumental skills – has allowed humans to live in almost...
The present study aimed to investigate two aspects of tool innovation in four-year-old children: inn...
The human capacity for technological innovation and creative problem-solving far surpasses that of a...
The existing research has demonstrated young children’s difficulty with solving novel tool innovatio...
© 2021 The Authors. Tool innovation has played a crucial role in human adaptation. Yet, this capacit...
Associative Tool Use (ATU) describes the use of two or more tools in combination, with the literatur...
AbstractTool innovation—designing and making novel tools to solve tasks—is extremely difficult for y...
Abstract: Through the mechanisms of observation, imitation and teaching, young children readily pick...
Through eight experiments this thesis investigated the divergence in children’s abilities in the dom...
Young children typically demonstrate low rates of tool innovation. However, previous studies have li...
Abstract: Prior research suggests that human children lack an aptitude for tool innovation. However,...
Research in developmental psychology suggests that children are poor tool innovators. However, such ...
Innovation is not only central to changes in traditional practice but arguably responsible for human...
The human ability to make tools and use them to solve problems may not be zoologically unique, but i...
Prior research suggests that human children lack an aptitude for tool innovation. However, children'...
Material culture – tools, technology, and instrumental skills – has allowed humans to live in almost...
The present study aimed to investigate two aspects of tool innovation in four-year-old children: inn...
The human capacity for technological innovation and creative problem-solving far surpasses that of a...
The existing research has demonstrated young children’s difficulty with solving novel tool innovatio...
© 2021 The Authors. Tool innovation has played a crucial role in human adaptation. Yet, this capacit...
Associative Tool Use (ATU) describes the use of two or more tools in combination, with the literatur...
AbstractTool innovation—designing and making novel tools to solve tasks—is extremely difficult for y...
Abstract: Through the mechanisms of observation, imitation and teaching, young children readily pick...
Through eight experiments this thesis investigated the divergence in children’s abilities in the dom...
Young children typically demonstrate low rates of tool innovation. However, previous studies have li...
Abstract: Prior research suggests that human children lack an aptitude for tool innovation. However,...
Research in developmental psychology suggests that children are poor tool innovators. However, such ...
Innovation is not only central to changes in traditional practice but arguably responsible for human...
The human ability to make tools and use them to solve problems may not be zoologically unique, but i...
Prior research suggests that human children lack an aptitude for tool innovation. However, children'...
Material culture – tools, technology, and instrumental skills – has allowed humans to live in almost...
The present study aimed to investigate two aspects of tool innovation in four-year-old children: inn...