DO INFANTS SHOW GENERALIZED IMITATION OF GESTURES? II. THE EFFECTS OF SKILLS TRAINING AND MULTIPLE EXEMPLAR MATCHING TRAINING
Autor: | Victoria E. Lovett, Pauline J. Horne, Mihela Erjavec |
---|---|
Rok vydání: | 2009 |
Předmět: |
Male
medicine.medical_specialty Matching (statistics) media_common.quotation_subject Psychology Child Experimental and Cognitive Psychology Audiology Generalization Psychological Extinction Psychological Developmental psychology Discrimination Learning Behavioral Neuroscience Nonverbal communication medicine Humans Discrimination learning Research Articles media_common Motivation Gestures Infant Retention Psychology Extinction (psychology) Imitative Behavior Practice Psychological Objective test Female Psychology Stimulus control Imitation Reinforcement Psychology Gesture |
Zdroj: | Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior. 91:355-376 |
ISSN: | 0022-5002 |
DOI: | 10.1901/jeab.2009.91-355 |
Popis: | The determinants of generalized imitation of manual gestures were investigated in 1- to 2-year-old infants. Eleven infants were first trained eight baseline matching relations; then, four novel gestures that the infants did not match in probe trials were selected as target behaviors. Next, in a generalized imitation test in which matching responses to baseline models were intermittently reinforced, but matching responses to target models were not eligible for reinforcement, the infants matched baseline models but not the majority of their target behaviors. To ensure their failure to match the target behaviors was not due to motor constraints, the infants were trained, in a multiple-baseline procedure, to produce the target responses under stimulus control that did not include an antecedent model of the target behavior. There was no evidence of generalized imitation in subsequent tests. When the infants were next trained to match each target behavior to criterion (tested in extinction) in a multiple-baseline-across-behaviors procedure, only 2 infants continued to match all their targets in subsequent tests; the remaining infants matched only some of them. Seven infants were next given mixed matching training with the target behaviors to criterion (tested in extinction); they subsequently matched these targets without reinforcement when interspersed with trials on which matching responses to baseline models were intermittently reinforced. In repeat tests, administered at 3-week intervals, these 7 children (and 2 that did not take part in mixed matching training) continued to match most of their target behaviors. The results support a trained matching account, but provide no evidence of generalized imitation, in 1- to 2-year-old infants. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |