The Importance of Discovery in Children's Causal Learning from Interventions

Four-year-olds were more accurate at learning causal structures from their own actions when they were allowed to act first and then observe an experimenter act, as opposed to observing first and then acting on the environment. Children who discovered the causal efficacy of events (as opposed to confirming the efficacy of events that they observed another discover) were also more accurate than children who only observed the experimenter act on the environment; accuracy in the confirmation and observation conditions was at similar levels. These data suggest that while children learn from acting on the environment, not all self-generated action produces equivalent causal learning.

[1]  Jack E. Kittell An experimental study of the effect of external direction during learning on transfer and retention of principles. , 1957 .

[2]  David M. Sobel,et al.  Detecting blickets: how young children use information about novel causal powers in categorization and induction. , 2000, Child development.

[3]  H. Wellman,et al.  Explaining human movements and actions: Children's understanding of the limits of psychological explanation , 1997, Cognition.

[4]  B. Bower A Child's Theory of Mind , 1993 .

[5]  T. Shultz Rules of Causal Attribution. , 1982 .

[6]  J. Sommerville,et al.  Treating another's actions as one's own: children's memory of and learning from joint activity. , 2007, Developmental psychology.

[7]  R. Mayer Should there be a three-strikes rule against pure discovery learning? The case for guided methods of instruction. , 2004, The American psychologist.

[8]  M. Haith Future-oriented processes in infancy: The case of visual expectations. , 1993 .

[9]  P. Harris,et al.  Children's use of counterfactual thinking in causal reasoning , 1996, Cognition.

[10]  A. Gopnik,et al.  Young Children Infer Causal Strength From Probabilities and Interventions , 2005, Psychological science.

[11]  Neil W Mulligan,et al.  Memory for actions: Enactment and source memory , 2004, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[12]  Gary Fireman,et al.  Self-observation and learning: the effect of watching oneself on problem solving performance , 2003 .

[13]  Michael D. Berzonsky,et al.  The role of familiarity in children's explanations of physical causality. , 1971 .

[14]  C. Glymour,et al.  Preschool children learn about causal structure from conditional interventions. , 2007, Developmental science.

[15]  Ted Bredderman,et al.  Effects of Activity-based Elementary Science on Student Outcomes: A Quantitative Synthesis , 1983 .

[16]  L. Schulz,et al.  Serious fun: preschoolers engage in more exploratory play when evidence is confounded. , 2007, Developmental psychology.

[17]  D. Sobel,et al.  Causal stream location effects in preschoolers , 2010 .

[18]  G. Hatano,et al.  Young children's understanding of the mind-body distinction. , 1993, Child development.

[19]  Jessica A. Sommerville,et al.  Pulling out the intentional structure of action: the relation between action processing and action production in infancy , 2005, Cognition.

[20]  A. Meltzoff Infant imitation and memory: nine-month-olds in immediate and deferred tests. , 1988, Child development.

[21]  J. Bruner The act of discovery. , 1961 .

[22]  H. Wellman,et al.  A self-agency bias in preschoolers' causal inferences. , 2009, Developmental psychology.

[23]  D. Ausubel,et al.  Learning by discovery , 1961 .

[24]  David M. Sobel,et al.  The importance of decision making in causal learning from interventions , 2006, Memory & cognition.

[25]  J. Sommerville,et al.  Action experience alters 3-month-old infants' perception of others' actions , 2005, Cognition.

[26]  J. Engelkamp,et al.  Categorical and order information in free recall of action phrases , 2001 .

[27]  S. Sloman,et al.  The advantage of timely intervention. , 2004, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[28]  Deanna Kuhn,et al.  Self-Directed Activity and Cognitive Development* , 1980 .

[29]  R. Siegler Defining the Locus of Developmental Differences in Children's Causal Reasoning. , 1975 .

[30]  Catherine Sophian,et al.  Early Developments in Children's Causal Judgments. , 1984 .

[31]  David M. Sobel,et al.  Causal learning mechanisms in very young children: two-, three-, and four-year-olds infer causal relations from patterns of variation and covariation. , 2001, Developmental psychology.

[32]  Michael R. Waldmann,et al.  Seeing versus doing: two modes of accessing causal knowledge. , 2005, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[33]  S. Sloman,et al.  Time as a guide to cause. , 2006, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[34]  Illtyd Trethowan Causality , 1938 .

[35]  G. Hermann Learning by Discovery: A Critical Review of Studies. , 1969 .

[36]  A. Gopnik,et al.  Causal learning across domains. , 2004, Developmental psychology.

[37]  Scott P. Johnson,et al.  Development of object concepts in infancy: Evidence for early learning in an eye-tracking paradigm , 2003, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[38]  D. Kuhn The development of causal reasoning. , 2012, Wiley interdisciplinary reviews. Cognitive science.

[39]  P. L. Adams THE ORIGINS OF INTELLIGENCE IN CHILDREN , 1976 .

[40]  Joshua B. Tenenbaum,et al.  Inferring causal networks from observations and interventions , 2003, Cogn. Sci..

[41]  David M. Sobel,et al.  Blickets and babies: the development of causal reasoning in toddlers and infants. , 2006, Developmental psychology.

[42]  L. Witmer The Montessori Method , 1914, The Psychological clinic.

[43]  Amy M. Masnick,et al.  The Development of Causal Reasoning , 2007 .