Abstract
Abstract
In two separate experiments, we examined 17-month-olds’ imitation in a third-party context. The aim was to explore
how seeing another person responding to a model’s novel action influenced infant imitation. The infants watched while a reliable
model demonstrated a novel action with a familiar (Experiment 1) or an unfamiliar (Experiment 2) object to a second actor. The
second actor either imitated or did not imitate the novel action of the model. Fewer infants imitated the model’s novel behavior
in the non-imitation condition than in the imitation condition in Experiment 1. In Experiment 2, infants’ likelihood of imitating
was not influenced by whether they had watched the second actor imitating the model’s novel action with the unfamiliar object. The
findings indicate that infants take into account a second adult’s actions in a third party context when infants receive
information that contradicts their existing knowledge and when it corresponds with their own experiences. If infants do not have
prior knowledge about how to handle a certain object, then the second adult’s actions do not seem to matter.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company