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  • 标题:Observed Human Actions, and Not Mechanical Actions, Induce Searching Errors in Infants
  • 本地全文:下载
  • 作者:Yusuke Moriguchi ; Reiko Matsunaka ; Shoji Itakura
  • 期刊名称:Child Development Research
  • 印刷版ISSN:2090-3987
  • 电子版ISSN:2090-3995
  • 出版年度:2012
  • 卷号:2012
  • DOI:10.1155/2012/465458
  • 出版社:Hindawi Publishing Corporation
  • 摘要:Recent neurophysiological studies have shown that several human brain regions involved in executing actions are activated by merely observing such actions via a human, and not by a mechanical hand. At a behavioral level, observing a human’s movements, but not those of a robot, significantly interferes with ongoing executed movements. However, it is unclear whether the biological tuning in the observation/execution matching system are functional during infancy. The present study examines whether a human’s actions, and not a mechanical action, influence infants’ execution of the same actions due to the observation/execution matching system. Twelve-month-old infants were given a searching task. In the tasks, infants observed an object hidden at location A, after which either a human hand (human condition) or a mechanical one (mechanical condition) searched the object correctly. Next, the object was hidden at location B and infants were allowed to search the object. We examined whether infants searched the object at location B correctly. The results revealed that infants in the human condition were more likely to search location A than those in the mechanical condition. Moreover, the results suggested that infants’ searching behaviors were affected by their observations of the same actions by a human, but not a mechanical hand. Thus, it may be concluded that the observation/execution matching system may be biologically tuned during infancy.
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