Children copy the actions of others with high fidelity, even when they are not causally relevant. This copying of visibly unnecessary actions is termed overimitation. Many competing theories propose mechanisms for overimitation behaviour. The present study examines these theories by studying the social factors that lead children to overimitate actions. Ninety-four children aged 5- to 8-years each completed five trials of an overimitation task. Each trial provided the opportunity to overimitate an action on familiar objects with minimal causal reasoning demands. Social cues (live or video demonstration) and eye contact from the demonstrator were manipulated. After the imitation, children's ratings of action rationality were collected. Substa...
SummaryCopying the behaviour of others is important for forming social bonds with other people and f...
The tendency to imitate causally irrelevant actions is termed overimitation. Here we investigated (a...
After seeing an action sequence children and adults tend to copy causally relevant and, more strikin...
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...
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...
Over-imitation has become a well-documented phenomenon. However there is evidence that both social a...
Over-imitation has become a well-documented phenomenon. However there is evidence that both social a...
The phenomenon of “over-imitation”—the copying of causally irrelevant actions—has influenced researc...
This work was supported by a John Templeton Foundation grant ID 40128 to AW and K Laland.Over-imitat...
Copying the behaviour of others is important for forming social bonds with other people and for lear...
Copying the behaviour of others is important for forming social bonds with other people and for lear...
Imitation underlies many traits thought to characterise our species, which includes the transmission...
The tendency to imitate causally irrelevant actions is termed overimitation. Here we investigated (a...
SummaryCopying the behaviour of others is important for forming social bonds with other people and f...
The tendency to imitate causally irrelevant actions is termed overimitation. Here we investigated (a...
After seeing an action sequence children and adults tend to copy causally relevant and, more strikin...
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...
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...
Over-imitation has become a well-documented phenomenon. However there is evidence that both social a...
Over-imitation has become a well-documented phenomenon. However there is evidence that both social a...
The phenomenon of “over-imitation”—the copying of causally irrelevant actions—has influenced researc...
This work was supported by a John Templeton Foundation grant ID 40128 to AW and K Laland.Over-imitat...
Copying the behaviour of others is important for forming social bonds with other people and for lear...
Copying the behaviour of others is important for forming social bonds with other people and for lear...
Imitation underlies many traits thought to characterise our species, which includes the transmission...
The tendency to imitate causally irrelevant actions is termed overimitation. Here we investigated (a...
SummaryCopying the behaviour of others is important for forming social bonds with other people and f...
The tendency to imitate causally irrelevant actions is termed overimitation. Here we investigated (a...
After seeing an action sequence children and adults tend to copy causally relevant and, more strikin...