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  4. Evidence for a sex effect during overimitation: boys copy irrelevant modelled actions more than girls across cultures

Evidence for a sex effect during overimitation: boys copy irrelevant modelled actions more than girls across cultures

Author(s)
Frick, Aurélien
Clément, Fabrice  
Chaire des sciences de l'information et de la communication  
Gruber, Thibaud  
Institut de biologie  
Date issued
December 6, 2017
In
Royal Society Open Science
Vol
170367
No
4
From page
1
To page
13
Reviewed by peer
1
Subjects
overimitation innovation tool-use cross-cultural sex differences cumulative culture
Abstract
Children are skilful at acquiring tool-using skills by faithfully copying relevant and irrelevant actions performed by others, but poor at innovating tools to solve problems. Five- to twelve-year-old urban French and rural Serbian children (N = 208) were exposed to a Hook task; a jar containing a reward in a bucket and a pipe cleaner as potential recovering tool material. In both countries, few children under the age of 10 made a hook from the pipe cleaner to retrieve the reward on their own. However, from five onward, the majority of unsuccessful children succeeded after seeing an adult model manufacturing a hook without completing the task. Additionally, a third of the children who observed a similar demonstration including an irrelevant action performed with a second object, a string, replicated this meaningless action. Children's difficulty with innovation and early capacity for overimitation thus do not depend on socio-economic background. Strikingly, we document a sex difference in overimitation across cultures, with boys engaging more in overimitation than girls, a finding that may result from differences regarding explorative tool-related behaviour. This male-biased sex effect sheds new light on our understanding of overimitation, and more generally, on how human tool culture evolved.
Publication type
journal article
Identifiers
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/20.500.14713/59268
DOI
10.1098/rsos.170367
-
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/123456789/11265
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