2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.jecp.2013.12.012
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The role of social interaction and pedagogical cues for eliciting and reducing overimitation in preschoolers

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Cited by 54 publications
(85 citation statements)
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“…However, most overimitation studies (for an exception see, e.g., Gardiner, ) used an opaque reward location to ensure that children could not see the reward before retrieving it (e.g., Berl & Hewlett, ; Hoehl et al., ; Horner & Whiten, ; McGuigan et al., ; Nielsen, Tomaselli, Mushin, & Whiten, ). In some studies the container itself was entirely opaque and nonfunctional actions were performed on the outside (e.g., Nielsen & Blank, ; Nielsen & Tomaselli, ).…”
Section: Experiments 1: Do Children Overimitate Actions That Are Clearmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…However, most overimitation studies (for an exception see, e.g., Gardiner, ) used an opaque reward location to ensure that children could not see the reward before retrieving it (e.g., Berl & Hewlett, ; Hoehl et al., ; Horner & Whiten, ; McGuigan et al., ; Nielsen, Tomaselli, Mushin, & Whiten, ). In some studies the container itself was entirely opaque and nonfunctional actions were performed on the outside (e.g., Nielsen & Blank, ; Nielsen & Tomaselli, ).…”
Section: Experiments 1: Do Children Overimitate Actions That Are Clearmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To investigate how the visibility of the reward affects children's imitation of nonfunctional actions, we used a task originally introduced by Hoehl et al. () but exchanged the opaque tube containing the rewards for a transparent tube. As long as the tube is opaque, children cannot see the crucial event—how the tool, that is inserted into the tube, connects with the reward.…”
Section: Experiments 1: Do Children Overimitate Actions That Are Clearmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Overimitation might therefore arise because children are responding to the cues of a person who they assume is teaching them something important, kind-relevant and generalizable (Hoehl, Zettersten, Schleihauf, Gratz, & Pauen, 2014). If children interpret the redundant actions employed in overimitation tasks as ritualized behavior, indicating something akin to "this is how we do it here", causally redundant actions…”
Section: Accepted M Manuscriptmentioning
confidence: 99%