4.2 Article

Observational learning of tool use in children: Investigating cultural spread through diffusion chains and learning mechanisms through ghost displays

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL CHILD PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 106, Issue 1, Pages 82-97

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jecp.2009.12.001

Keywords

Observational learning; Ghost condition; Diffusion chain; Imitation; Emulation; Culture

Funding

  1. Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council Funding Source: Medline

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In the first of two experiments, we demonstrate the spread of a novel form of tool use across 20 cultural generations of child-to-child transmission. An experimentally seeded technique spread with 100% fidelity along twice as many generations as has been investigated in recent exploratory diffusion experiments of this type. This contrasted with only a single child discovering the technique spontaneously in a comparable group tested individually without any model. This study accordingly documents children's social learning of tool use on a new, population-level scale that characterizes real-world cultural phenomena. In a second experiment, underlying social learning processes were investigated with a focus on the contrast between imitation (defined as copying actions) and emulation (defined as learning from the results of actions only). In two different ghost conditions, children were presented with the task used in the first experiment but now operated without sight of an agent performing the task, thereby presenting only the information used in emulation. Children in ghost conditions were less successful than those who had watched a model in action and showed variable matching to what they had seen. These findings suggest the importance of observational learning of complex tool use through imitation rather than only through emulation. Results of the two experiments are compared with those of similar experiments conducted previously with chimpanzees and are discussed in relation to the wider perspective of human culture and the influence of task complexity on social learning. Crown Copyright (c) 2009 Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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