Interacting Socially With Human Hands at 24 Months of Age |
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Authors: | Virginia Slaughter Mark Nielsen Petrina Enchelmaier |
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Affiliation: | Early Cognitive Development Unit School of Psychology University of Queensland, Australia |
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Abstract: | This experiment explored whether or not 2‐year‐olds would engage in synchronic imitation with human hands. Sixty‐four 24‐month‐old infants participated. In a test of synchronic imitation, infants were given a toy while a model simultaneously performed novel actions on an identical toy. Infants were randomly assigned to 1 of 4 model conditions: a familiar person, an unfamiliar person, disembodied human hands, and disembodied robotic pincers. Infants were as likely to synchronically imitate disembodied hands as a person. Imitation of the pincers was significantly lower. This pattern suggests that 2‐year‐olds will engage socially with human hands in the absence of the rest of the body. |
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