The rationality of (over-) imitationImitation is a powerful and ubiquitous social learning strategy, fundamental for the development of individual skills and cultural traditions. Recent research on the cognitive foundations and development of imitation, though, presents a surprising picture: Although even infants imitate in selective, efficient, and rational ways, children and adults engage in overimitation. Rather than imitating selectively and efficiently, they sometimes faithfully reproduce causally irrelevant actions as much as relevant ones. In this article, we suggest a new perspective on this phenomenon by integrating established findings on children’s more general capacities for rational action parsing with newer findings on overimitation. We suggest that overimitation is a consequence of children’s growing capacities to understand causal and social constraints in relation to goals and that it rests on the human capacity to represent observed actions simultaneously on different levels of goal hierarchies.https://www.psych.uni-goettingen.de/de/development/publications_department/articlereference-2019-02-26-9727181117https://www.psych.uni-goettingen.de/@@site-logo/university-of-goettingen-logo.svg
S. Keupp, T. Behne and H. Rakoczy
The rationality of (over-) imitation
Perspectives on Psychological Science
Imitation is a powerful and ubiquitous social learning strategy, fundamental for the development of individual skills
and cultural traditions. Recent research on the cognitive foundations and development of imitation, though, presents
a surprising picture: Although even infants imitate in selective, efficient, and rational ways, children and adults
engage in overimitation. Rather than imitating selectively and efficiently, they sometimes faithfully reproduce causally
irrelevant actions as much as relevant ones. In this article, we suggest a new perspective on this phenomenon by
integrating established findings on children’s more general capacities for rational action parsing with newer findings
on overimitation. We suggest that overimitation is a consequence of children’s growing capacities to understand
causal and social constraints in relation to goals and that it rests on the human capacity to represent observed actions
simultaneously on different levels of goal hierarchies.