Preschool children's use of perceptual-motor knowledge and hierarchical representational skills for tool making

Autor(en): Gonul, Gokhan
Takmaz, Ece
Hohenberger, Annette
Stichwörter: COGNITIVE ONTOGENY; CULTURE; EMERGENCE; EVOLUTION; Familiarity; FLEXIBILITY; FUNCTIONAL FIXEDNESS; Hierarchical complexity; IDEOMOTOR; Ideomotor approach; INNOVATION; LANGUAGE; Perceptual-motor knowledge; PRIOR EXPERIENCE; Psychology; Psychology, Experimental; Social learning; Tool making and innovation
Erscheinungsdatum: 2021
Herausgeber: ELSEVIER
Journal: ACTA PSYCHOLOGICA
Volumen: 220
Zusammenfassung: 
Although other animals can make simple tools, the expanded and complex material culture of humans is unprecedented in the animal kingdom. Tool making is a slow and late-developing ability in humans, and preschool children find making tools to solve problems very challenging. This difficulty in tool making might be related to the lack of familiarity with the tools and may be overcome by children's long term perceptual-motor knowledge. Thus, in this study, the effect of tool familiarity on tool making was investigated with a task in which 5-to-6-yearold children (n = 75) were asked to remove a small bucket from a vertical tube. The results show that children are better at tool making if the tool and its relation to the task are familiar to them (e.g., soda straw). Moreover, we also replicated the finding that hierarchical complexity and tool making were significantly related. Results are discussed in light of the ideomotor approach.
ISSN: 00016918
DOI: 10.1016/j.actpsy.2021.103415

Zur Langanzeige

Google ScholarTM

Prüfen

Altmetric