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Do children imitate even when it is costly? New insights from a novel task

journal contribution
posted on 2025-02-13, 09:01 authored by M Zhao, Tze Kiet FongTze Kiet Fong, A Whiten, M Nielsen
Children have a proclivity to learn through faithful imitation, but the extent to which this applies under significant cost remains unclear. To address this, we investigated whether 4- to 6-year-old children (N = 97) would stop imitating to forego a desirable food reward. We presented participants with a task involving arranging marshmallows and craft sticks, with the goal being either to collect marshmallows or build a tower. Children replicated the demonstrated actions with high fidelity regardless of the goal, but retrieved rewards differently. Children either copied the specific actions needed to build a tower, prioritizing tower completion over reward; or adopted a novel convention of stacking materials before collecting marshmallows, and developed their own method to achieve better outcomes. These results suggest children's social learning decisions are flexible and context-dependent, yet that when framed by an ostensive goal, children imitated in adherence to the goal despite incurring significant material costs.

History

Preferred citation

Zhao, M., Fong, F. T. K., Whiten, A. & Nielsen, M. (2024). Do children imitate even when it is costly? New insights from a novel task. British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 42(1), 18-35. https://doi.org/10.1111/bjdp.12463

Journal title

British Journal of Developmental Psychology

Volume

42

Issue

1

Publication date

2024-03-01

Pagination

18-35

Publisher

Wiley

Publication status

Published

Online publication date

2023-10-06

ISSN

0261-510X

eISSN

2044-835X

Language

en