Abstract

We examined the effect of mimicry on how 16-month-old infants learn by observation a novel tool use action, which consisted of using a rake to retrieve a toy. Across four conditions, we manipulated whether during an initial play phase, an adult mimicked the infant's play or not (testing the effect of mimicry), the infant played with the adult or played alone (controlling the effect of interacting with a contingent partner) and whether the infant saw a demonstration of the tool's use or not (evaluating baseline performance). We found that infants who had been mimicked learned best from a demonstration of the rake's use and performed better than infants who only played with the experimenter without mimicry or played by themselves before the demonstration. As expected, infants did not learn from a demonstration of the rake's use when they played by themselves and thus had no previous interaction with an experimenter. The mechanisms driving this powerful learning effect of mimicry are discussed.

Highlights

  • The goal of this study was to investigate whether mimicry has an impact on infants’ social learning, in particular whether it facilitates observational learning of a new tool use action

  • There were no significant differences between infants’ scores in the Play Alone + No Demo and Play Alone + Demo Conditions

  • The aim of this study was to explore whether mimicry affects how infants learn by observation a novel tool use action

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Summary

Introduction

The goal of this study was to investigate whether mimicry has an impact on infants’ social learning, in particular whether it facilitates observational learning of a new tool use action. Mimicry is a special type of imitation, referred to as synchronous imitation in infants and defined as the systematic overt imitation of each other’s behaviour, generally in the context of a playful interaction between peers [1]. Mimicry becomes subtle and refers rather to the automatic and non-conscious imitation of others’ facial expressions, postures, gestures, mannerisms or verbal behaviours and has been coined the ‘chameleon effect’ [2]. Mimicry has an important role in our interactions, enabling pleasant and smooth social exchange. We facilitate interpersonal affiliation [2,3,4,5], PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0113695. We facilitate interpersonal affiliation [2,3,4,5], PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0113695 December 10, 2014

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