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The ontogeny and phylogeny of cultural cognition

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Title: The ontogeny and phylogeny of cultural cognition


1
The ontogeny and phylogeny of cultural cognition
2
Some uniquely human abilities
  • language
  • artifacts and technology
  • social practices and institutions

3
Some uniquely human abilities
playing hide-and-seek
showing your vacation photos
attending a summer school
  • language
  • artifacts and technology
  • social practices and institutions

holding open a door for someone
playing a duet
helping your kid with homework
driving in traffic
taking a walk together
pointing out interesting sights for others
co-authoring a paper
playing house with your kid
cooking dinner together
planning a party
playing cards
holding a ladder steady for someone
going on a date
meeting for lunch
4
  • All involve sharing and collaboration.

Tomasello, Carpenter, Call, Behne, Moll (2005)
5
  • All involve sharing and collaboration.
  • We propose that the crucial difference between
    human cognition and that of other species is the
    ability to participate with others in
    collaborative activities with shared goals and
    intentions shared intentionality.

Tomasello, Carpenter, Call, Behne, Moll (2005)
6
  • All involve sharing and collaboration.
  • We propose that the crucial difference between
    human cognition and that of other species is the
    ability to participate with others in
    collaborative activities with shared goals and
    intentions shared intentionality.
  • Two components
  • understanding of others goals and intentions

Tomasello, Carpenter, Call, Behne, Moll (2005)
7
  • All involve sharing and collaboration.
  • We propose that the crucial difference between
    human cognition and that of other species is the
    ability to participate with others in
    collaborative activities with shared goals and
    intentions shared intentionality.
  • Two components
  • understanding of others goals and intentions
  • motivation to share psychological states with
    others

Tomasello, Carpenter, Call, Behne, Moll (2005)
8
  • By 9-12 months, infants understand something
    about others goals and intentions.
  • Young children with autism and chimpanzees may
    have (at least) some understanding of others
    goals.
  • An understanding of others goals and intentions
    gives individuals a tremendous social advantage
    in terms of being able to explain and predict
    others behavior.
  • But neither is enough to explain some interesting
    aspects of human cognition.
  • In addition

9
Sharing intentions
10
Understanding of others goals and intentions
Attention
Tomasello, Carpenter, Call, Behne, Moll (2005)
11
Sharing intentions
SHARED GOAL
SHARED GOAL
Joint Attention
Decision-Making
Decision-Making
relevant reality
relevant skills, knowledge
relevant reality
relevant skills, knowledge
JOINT INTENTION
JOINT INTENTION
Tomasello, Carpenter, Call, Behne, Moll (2005)
12
  • Sharing and coordinating psychological states
  • Motivation to share (joint emotions, attention,
    interest)
  • primary intersubjectivity
  • joint attention
  • declarative pointing
  • Collaboration (joint goals, intentions)
  • role reversal
  • helping
  • cooperation and collaborative activities

13
  • Sharing and coordinating psychological states
  • Motivation to share (joint emotions, attention,
    interest)
  • primary intersubjectivity
  • joint attention
  • declarative pointing
  • Collaboration (joint goals, intentions)
  • role reversal
  • helping
  • cooperation and collaborative activities

14
Motivation to share in infants
  • Early proto-conversations (early infancy sharing
    emotions) (e.g., work by Rochat Striano,
    Stern, Trevarthen)

15
Motivation to share in infants
  • Early proto-conversations (early infancy)
  • (e.g., work by Rochat Striano, Stern,
    Trevarthen)
  • Joint attention (by 9 months sharing attention
    interest triadic) (e.g., work by Bakeman
    Adamson, Tomasello, Trevarthen)

16
13-month-old infant in joint attentional
engagement
17
Motivation to share in infants
  • Early proto-conversations (early infancy)
  • (e.g., work by Rochat Striano, Stern,
    Trevarthen)
  • Joint attention (by 9 months)
  • (e.g., work by Bakeman Adamson, Tomasello,
    Trevarthen)
  • Declarative gestures
  • (e.g., work by Bates, Bruner, Camaioni,
    Lempers, Tomasello)
  • shows (around 10 months)
  • points (around 12 months)

18
3-year-old child pointing declaratively
19
Motivation to share in infants
  • Early proto-conversations (early infancy)
  • (e.g., work by Rochat Striano, Stern,
    Trevarthen)
  • Joint attention (by 9 months)
  • (e.g., work by Bakeman Adamson, Tomasello,
    Trevarthen)
  • Declarative gestures
  • (e.g., work by Bates, Bruner, Camaioni,
    Lempers, Tomasello)
  • shows (around 10 months)
  • points (around 12 months)
  • Moore not sharing, just attention to self

20
Liszkowski, Carpenter, Henning, Striano,
Tomasello (2004)
  • 12-month-olds
  • Toys were activated to elicit pointing. E
    reacted to infants points in one of four
    different ways
  • Ignore
  • Look only to Event
  • Look only to Face
  • Joint Attention

21

of trials with a point Repeated pointing
Joint Attention -
Face -
Event -
Ignore -
  • Infants were most satisfied in the Joint
    Attention condition
  • in Joint Attention, they pointed more across
    trials
  • in the other conditions, within trials, they
    repeated points more often.
  • 12-month-olds point to share attention and
    interest.

22
Liszkowski, Carpenter, Tomasello (in press)
  • When E misunderstands the infants referent, even
    if E reacts with excitement, 12-month-old infants
    repeat their pointing. Infants pointing is thus
    about specific objects or events, not just to
    obtain an adult reaction. (also evidence of
    collaborative communication message repair)

23
Motivation to share in chimpanzees and children
with autism
  • Early proto-conversations no (?)
  • (autism e.g., work by Hobson)
  • (chimpanzees Tomonaga et al.)
  • Joint attention no
  • (autism e.g., work by Carpenter, Charman,
    Dawson, Mundy, Wetherby)
  • (chimpanzees e.g., Bard Vauclair,
    Tomasello Carpenter)
  • Declarative gestures no
  • (autism e.g., work by Baron-Cohen,
    Carpenter, Loveland, Mundy, Sigman)
  • (chimpanzees e.g., Gomez, Tomasello
    Carpenter)

24
  • Sharing and coordinating intentions
  • Motivation to share
  • primary intersubjectivity
  • joint attention
  • declarative pointing
  • Collaboration

25
  • Collaboration
  • Bratman (1992)
  • shared goal each participant has the goal that
    we (in mutual knowledge) do X together
  • coordination of plans/intentions. This requires
    that
  • each participant understands both roles of the
    interaction (so can reverse roles if needed) and
  • each can help the other with his role if needed.

26
  • Sharing and coordinating intentions
  • Motivation to share
  • primary intersubjectivity
  • joint attention
  • declarative pointing
  • Collaboration
  • role reversal
  • helping
  • cooperation and collaborative activities

27
Carpenter, Tomasello, Striano (2005)
Tomasello Carpenter (2005)
  • 12- and 18-month-olds, children with autism,
    chimpanzees
  • E performed one role of an action and had S
    perform the other, e.g.,
  • E hid a toy for S to find, or
  • E held out a plate for S to place a toy on it.
  • Test E gave the object(s) for the other role
    to S and waited.
  • Does S perform Es previous role (hiding or
    offering) toward E (while looking at her)?

28
Hiding Task

p.053
  • Infants sometimes reversed roles (hid the toy
    for E or held out the plate for her) and looked
    to E.
  • Children with autism and chimpanzees sometimes
    performed these actions but did so without looks
    to E.
  • They may have been reversing at an action,
    rather than a psychological level. (see also
    work by Hobson)

Offering Task
29
  • Sharing and coordinating intentions
  • Motivation to share
  • primary intersubjectivity
  • joint attention
  • declarative pointing
  • Collaboration
  • role reversal
  • helping (see also Kuhlmeier, Wynn, Bloom,
    2003)
  • cooperation and collaborative activities

30
Liszkowski, Carpenter, Striano, Tomasello (2006)
  • 12- and 18-month-olds
  • Infants watched E repeat an action (e.g.,
    punching holes) with a target object.
  • The target and a distractor object were
    displaced.
  • E began looking around.

31
  • Infants pointed to help the adult by informing
    her about the location of the object she was
    looking for.

32
Warneken Tomasello (2006) 18-month-old
infant
33
Warneken Tomasello (2006) nursery-reared
chimpanzee
34
Warneken Tomasello (2006)
  • 18-month-olds help instrumentally, in many
    different situations
  • chimpanzees only when E reached
  • but other positive results for chimpanzees too
  • helping doesnt necessarily involve a shared
    goal understanding others individual goal is
    sufficient

35
  • Sharing and coordinating intentions
  • Motivation to share
  • primary intersubjectivity
  • joint attention
  • declarative pointing
  • Collaboration
  • role reversal
  • helping
  • cooperation and collaborative activities

36
  • Sharing and coordinating intentions
  • Motivation to share
  • primary intersubjectivity
  • joint attention
  • declarative pointing
  • Collaboration
  • role reversal
  • helping
  • cooperation and collaborative activities
  • communication (Clark, 1997 Golinkoff, 1993
    Sperber Wilson, 1986 Tomasello et al., 2005,
    submitted)

37
Behne, Carpenter, Tomasello (2005) Hare
Tomasello (2004)
  • 14- to 24-month-olds,
  • chimpanzees
  • E hid a toy/food in one of
  • two opaque containers.
  • E indicated the toys
  • location by pointing or gazing
  • ostensively at the correct
  • container.

38
Infants
Chimpanzees
  • Infants pass this test.
  • Chimpanzees do not use cooperative/communicative
    (pointing) cues but do use competitive (reaching)
    ones.

39
  • Sharing and coordinating intentions
  • Motivation to share
  • primary intersubjectivity
  • joint attention
  • declarative pointing
  • Collaboration
  • role reversal
  • helping
  • cooperation and collaborative activities
  • communication
  • instrumental

40
Warneken, Chen, Tomasello (2006) Liebal et al.
(in prep.)
  • 18- and 24-month-olds, chimpanzees (and children
    with autism)
  • Social and instrumental games
  • E1 E2 demonstrate how to operate the apparatus.
  • E1 cooperates with the child to perform the joint
    activity.
  • E1 refrains from the activity for 15 seconds.

Problem-Solving Play
Parallel Roles Tube with Handles Trampoline
Complementary Roles Elevator Double Tube
41
Warneken, Chen, Tomasello (2006)
42
Warneken, Chen, Tomasello (2006)
43
  • By 18 months, infants are able to cooperate with
    an adult to achieve a joint goal.
  • When the adult stopped playing his role, children
    communicatively requested his continued
    participation.
  • New results at least by 2 years, children do
    this even in tasks in which they could achieve
    the goal individually (Gräfenhein, Behne,
    Carpenter, Tomasello, in prep.)
  • Chimpanzees (and children with autism) showed far
    less coordination of roles and no communicative
    requests for their partners continued
    participation.
  • Chimpanzees showed no interest in the social
    games.

44
  • Sharing and coordinating intentions
  • Motivation to share
  • primary intersubjectivity
  • joint attention
  • declarative pointing
  • Collaboration
  • role reversal
  • helping
  • cooperation and collaborative activities
  • communication
  • instrumental
  • pretense

45
Pretense
  • Pretend play is (probably) uniquely human.
  • It is often collaborative (shared goal, roles,
    etc.).
  • Some consider it to be the earliest form of true
    collective intentionality in infancy (Rakoczy,
    2006).
  • It sets the stage for later collective beliefs
    (money, marriage, government).

46
Summary
  • In addition to their understanding of others
    goals and intentions, infants demonstrate
  • the motivation to share psychological states with
    others
  • and
  • ability to cooperate and coordinate intentions
    with others.
  • Chimpanzees and children with autism do not show
    evidence of either of these additional
    motivations or abilities.

47
Where does it come from?
48
(a sketchy)Phylogenetic hypothesis
  • Primates are competitive. Humans in addition
    are cooperative they evolved skills and
    motivations for collaborating.

Tomasello, Carpenter, Call, Behne, Moll (2005)
49
(a sketchy)Phylogenetic hypothesis
  • Primates are competitive. Humans in addition
    are cooperative they evolved skills and
    motivations for collaborating.
  • How?
  • Individuals or groups who could collaborate more
    effectively had a selective advantage (more food,
    better shelter protection, etc.).

Tomasello, Carpenter, Call, Behne, Moll (2005)
50
(a sketchy)Phylogenetic hypothesis
  • Primates are competitive. Humans in addition
    are cooperative they evolved skills and
    motivations for collaborating.
  • How?
  • Individuals or groups who could collaborate more
    effectively had a selective advantage (more food,
    better shelter protection, etc.).
  • The abilities to share and collaborate made
    language and other cultural learning and creation
    possible.

Tomasello, Carpenter, Call, Behne, Moll (2005)
51
(a sketchy)Phylogenetic hypothesis
  • Primates are competitive. Humans in addition
    are cooperative they evolved skills and
    motivations for collaborating.
  • How?
  • Individuals or groups who could collaborate more
    effectively had a selective advantage (more food,
    better shelter protection, etc.).
  • The abilities to share and collaborate made
    language and other cultural learning and creation
    possible.
  • Over cultural-historical time, repeated,
    habitual instances of sharing intentions resulted
    in social practices and institutions (e.g.,
    marriage, money, government).

Tomasello, Carpenter, Call, Behne, Moll (2005)
52
(a sketchy)Ontogenetic hypothesis
  • Two interweaving lines of development
  • understanding of goals and intentions
  • motivation to share psychological states and
    activities

Tomasello, Carpenter, Call, Behne, Moll (2005)
53
(a sketchy)Ontogenetic hypothesis
  • Two interweaving lines of development
  • understanding of goals and intentions
  • motivation to share psychological states and
    activities
  • The motivation to share transforms the
    understanding intentions line, resulting in
    shared collaborative activities.

Tomasello, Carpenter, Call, Behne, Moll (2005)
54
Understanding intentions line Emotions ? Goals ? Intentions

Tomasello, Carpenter, Call, Behne, Moll (2005)
55
Understanding intentions line Emotions ? Goals ? Intentions

Sharing motivation line


Motivation to share
Tomasello, Carpenter, Call, Behne, Moll (2005)
56
Understanding intentions line Emotions ? Goals ? Intentions

Sharing motivation line

Product Proto- conversations (3 months)

Motivation to share

Tomasello, Carpenter, Call, Behne, Moll (2005)
57
Understanding intentions line Emotions ? Goals ? Intentions

Sharing motivation line

Product Proto- ? conversations (3 months) Shared goals (9 months)
Motivation to share
Tomasello, Carpenter, Call, Behne, Moll (2005)
58
Understanding intentions line Emotions ? Goals ? Intentions

Sharing motivation line

Product Proto- ? conversations (3 months) Shared goals ? (9 months) Collaboration (14 months)
Motivation to share
Tomasello, Carpenter, Call, Behne, Moll (2005)
59
Individualistic (chimpanzees, children with autism) Collaborative (1-year-old infants)
gaze following joint attention
social learning instructed learning
social manipulation cooperative communication
group activity collaboration
Tomasello Carpenter (in press)
60
Take-home message
  • What is unique about human cultural cognition is
    the motivation to share and the ability to
    collaborate.
  • The interaction of
  • a biological adaptation
  • cultural-historical processes, and
  • individual development
  • results in uniquely human abilities
    ranging from language to taking a walk together,
    all of which involve shared intentionality.
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