Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
916564 Cognitive Development 2012 15 Pages PDF
Abstract

Children's acquisition of tool use abilities is an important part of development but is not yet well understood. This study compares two modes of tool-use learning, observation and individual haptic experience. Two- and 3-year-olds had haptic experience with tools, observed tool use by others, had both haptic and observational experience, or no tool exposure. Their tool choice and use were evaluated across six problem-solving tasks that varied in degree of difficulty. Children learned about tools better by observation than by individual learning through manual exploration. Performance also varied by task difficulty, with more complex tasks proving more difficult. Findings are discussed from cognitive and evolutionary perspectives.

► We compare experiential and observational learning of tool use in preschoolers. ► Children chose and used tools for toy-retrieval tasks that varied in difficulty. ► Observation led to more accurate and efficient tool-use learning than experience. ► Observational learning abilities may have evolved to culturally transmit tool knowledge.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Developmental and Educational Psychology
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