Flexibility in Problem Solving: Analogical Transfer of Tool Use in Toddlers Is Immune to Delay
Forskningsoutput: Tidskriftsbidrag › Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift
Abstract
Solving problems that are perceptually dissimilar but require similar solutions is a key skill in everyday life. In adults, this ability, termed analogical transfer, draws on memories of relevant past experiences that partially overlap with the present task at hand. Thanks to this support from long-term memory, analogical transfer allows remarkable behavioral flexibility beyond immediate situations. However, little is known about the interaction between long-term memory and analogical transfer in development as, to date, they have been studied separately. Here, for the first time, effects of age and memory on analogical transfer were investigated in 2-to-4.5-olds in a simple tool-use setup. Children attempted to solve a puzzle box after training the correct solution on a different looking box, either right before the test or 24 hours earlier. We found that children (N = 105) could transfer the
solution regardless of the delay and a perceptual conflict introduced in the tool set. For children who failed to transfer (N = 54) and repeated the test without a perceptual conflict, the odds of success did not improve. Our findings suggest that training promoted the detection of functional similarities between boxes and, thereby, flexible transfer both in the short and the long term.
solution regardless of the delay and a perceptual conflict introduced in the tool set. For children who failed to transfer (N = 54) and repeated the test without a perceptual conflict, the odds of success did not improve. Our findings suggest that training promoted the detection of functional similarities between boxes and, thereby, flexible transfer both in the short and the long term.
Detaljer
Författare | |
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Enheter & grupper | |
Externa organisationer |
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Forskningsområden | Ämnesklassifikation (UKÄ) – OBLIGATORISK
Nyckelord |
Originalspråk | engelska |
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Artikelnummer | 2706 |
Tidskrift | Frontiers in Psychology |
Status | Published - 2020 okt 6 |
Publikationskategori | Forskning |
Peer review utförd | Ja |
Relaterad forskningsoutput
Katarzyna Bobrowicz, Mikael Johansson & Mathias Osvath, 2020 jul 28, I: Scientific Reports. 12603.
Forskningsoutput: Tidskriftsbidrag › Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift
Katarzyna Bobrowicz, 2019, Lund: Department of Philosophy, Lund University. 304 s.
Forskningsoutput: Avhandling › Doktorsavhandling (sammanläggning)
Related projects
2020/06/01 → 2022/05/31
Projekt: Forskning
I will be EXPERT! 2- to 4-year-olds’ ability to flexibly use knowledge from one situation to another
Katarzyna Bobrowicz & Elia Psouni
2017/12/05 → 2019/12/31
Projekt: Forskning › Tvärvetenskaplig forskning