4.1 Article

Cultural transmission of tool use in young children: A diffusion chain study

Journal

SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
Volume 17, Issue 3, Pages 699-718

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-9507.2007.00453.x

Keywords

culture; observational learning; tool use; transmission

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Developmental and gender effects in the transmission of information about a tool-use task were investigated within a 'diffusion chain' design. One hundred and twenty-seven children (65 three-year-olds and 62 five-year-olds) participated. Eighty children took part in diffusion chains in which consecutive children in chains of five witnessed two attempts on a tool-use task by the previous child in the chain. Comparisons were made between two experimental conditions in which alternative techniques were seeded and a third no-model control condition. Children in the diffusion chains conformed to the technique they witnessed, in one experimental condition faithfully transmitting a technique absent in the no-model condition. Five-year-olds displayed more robust transmission than three-year-olds, and boys were both more competent and displayed stronger transmission than girls.

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