Pinkham, A. M., & Jaswal, V. K. (2011). Watch and learn? Infants privilege efficiency over pedagogy during imitative learning. Infancy, 16, 535-544

Abstract

This experiment tested how 18-month-old infants' prior experience with an object affects their imitation.   Specifically, we asked whether infants would imitate an adult who used her head to illuminate a light-box if they had earlier discovered that the light could be illuminated with their hands.   In the Self-Discovery condition, infants had the opportunity to freely explore the light-box; all infants used their hands to activate the light-box at least once during this period.   The experimenter then entered the room and, while providing explicit pedagogical cues, demonstrated illuminating the light-box using her forehead.   In the Demonstration Only condition, infants just viewed the experimenter's demonstration.   During a subsequent testing phase, infants in the Demonstration Only condition were more likely to use their foreheads to activate the light-box.   Conversely, infants in the Self-Discovery condition were more likely to use their hands, suggesting that efficiency can “trump” pedagogy in some observational learning contexts.

Return to List of Publications