Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
7273177 Infant Behavior and Development 2016 9 Pages PDF
Abstract
The present two studies investigated whether toddlers' ability to use pictures in problem solving could be facilitated by making available the social context in which pictures were created. To make this social context available, we introduced an Experimental treatment in which the creator was intentionally drawing different objects. In Experiment-1, due to this treatment, children performed better in the Test in which the Experimenter was drawing the Test-pictures of the retrieval task. In Experiment-2, after the same Experimental treatment the facilitative effect was replicated although the social context was removed in the Test phase by using pre-drawn Test-pictures without any drawing action in the retrieval task. The results suggest that a treatment which offers the opportunity to understand the socially mediated representational function of pictures enables children to perform better when contextualizing pictures in current reality. These two experiments revealed a novel way to facilitate children's picture comprehension by identifying an underlying factor that can explain children's difficulty in picture comprehension.
Related Topics
Life Sciences Neuroscience Behavioral Neuroscience
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