Preschoolers’ Motivation to Over‐Imitate Humans and Robots

Hanna Schleihauf (Corresponding author), Stefanie Hoehl, Neli Tsvetkova, Alexander König, Katja Mombaur, Sabina Pauen

Publications: Contribution to journalArticlePeer Reviewed

Abstract

From preschool age, humans tend to imitate causally irrelevant actions-they over-imitate. This study investigated whether children over-imitate even when they know a more efficient task solution and whether they imitate irrelevant actions equally from a human compared to a robot model. Five-to-six-year-olds (N = 107) watched either a robot or human retrieve a reward from a puzzle box. First a model demonstrated an inefficient (Trial 1), then an efficient (Trial 2), then again the inefficient strategy (Trial 3). Subsequent to each demonstration, children copied whichever strategy had been demonstrated regardless of whether the model was a human or a robot. Results indicate that over-imitation can be socially motivated, and that humanoid robots and humans are equally likely to elicit this behavior.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)222-238
Number of pages17
JournalChild Development
Volume92
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2021

Austrian Fields of Science 2012

  • 501005 Developmental psychology

Keywords

  • FIDELITY
  • INFANTS
  • KNOWLEDGE
  • MODEL AGE
  • ORIGINS
  • OVERIMITATION
  • TENDENCY
  • TOOL USE
  • TRANSMISSION
  • YOUNG-CHILDREN

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