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I copy you as I believe you know about our culture: Combining imitation and selective trust literatures

journal contribution
posted on 2025-02-13, 09:02 authored by Tze Kiet FongTze Kiet Fong, M Nielsen, KH Corriveau
Empirical findings and theorizations of both imitation and selective trust offer different views on and interpretations of children's social learning mechanisms. The imitation literature provides ample documentation of children's behavioural patterns in the acquisition of socially appropriate norms and practices. The selective trust literature provides insights into children's cognitive processes of choosing credible informants and what information to learn in future interactions. In this paper, we place together findings from both fields and note that they share analogically similar theoretical underpinnings and offer explanations that are complementary to each other. We contend that children's imitative tendency may be due to their selection of in-group members as cultural experts, who serve as reliable sources of conventional information. Moving forward, we note the importance of evaluating individual differences and cultural factors to provide a more holistic understanding of universality and variation in children's social learning mechanisms.

History

Preferred citation

Fong, F. T. K., Nielsen, M. & Corriveau, K. H. (2023). I copy you as I believe you know about our culture: Combining imitation and selective trust literatures. Infant and Child Development, 32(5). https://doi.org/10.1002/icd.2453

Journal title

Infant and Child Development

Volume

32

Issue

5

Publication date

2023-09-01

Publisher

Wiley

Publication status

Published

Online publication date

2023-08-02

ISSN

1522-7227

eISSN

1522-7219

Language

en