拟人论对人类(智人)成功使用工具的贡献。

IF 1.1 4区 心理学 Q4 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES Journal of Comparative Psychology Pub Date : 2023-08-01 DOI:10.1037/com0000339
Michael Haslam
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引用次数: 0

摘要

人类拟人化:由于我们进化的超社会性,我们通过人的有色眼镜看世界。在这篇综述中,我认为,人类所表现出的非凡的工具使用能力中,有很大一部分是由于我们错误地将物体和设备拟人化并形成了社会关系。我引入了“阴谋”这个术语来描述这种错误,勾勒出它的证据轮廓,将其与社会互动的内在奖励联系起来,并用它来帮助解释人类儿童和成人的过度模仿——过度模仿本身被认为是人类技术复杂性的基础。我还建议测试这一概念的存在和局限性的途径,明确关注特定情境下的个体和时间变化。我认为,来自时间限制或不透明机制的认知压力是机制产生的原因,人们会迅速、下意识地将目标或欲望归因于减少认知过载的工具。机械制造有助于理解我们如何创造和使用组合技术,有助于澄清与非人类动物使用工具的差异,有助于研究人类对物体的迷恋。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c) 2023 APA,版权所有)。
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Anthropomorphism as a contributor to the success of human (Homo sapiens) tool use.

Humans anthropomorphize: as a result of our evolved ultrasociality, we see the world through person-colored glasses. In this review, I suggest that an interesting proportion of the extraordinary tool-using abilities shown by humans results from our mistakenly anthropomorphizing and forming social relationships with objects and devices. I introduce the term machination to describe this error, sketch an outline of the evidence for it, tie it to intrinsic reward for social interaction, and use it to help explain overimitation-itself posited as underpinning human technological complexity-by human children and adults. I also suggest pathways for testing the concept's presence and limits, with an explicit focus on context-specific individual and temporal variation. I posit cognitive pressure from time constraints or opaque mechanisms as a cause for machination, with rapid, subconscious attribution of goals or desires to tools reducing cognitive overload. Machination holds promise for understanding how we create and use combinatorial technology, for clarifying differences with nonhuman animal tool use, and for examining the human fascination with objects. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
7.10%
发文量
0
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Comparative Psychology publishes original research from a comparative perspective on the behavior, cognition, perception, and social relationships of diverse species.
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