Preschoolers' information search strategies: Inefficient but adaptive

Kai Xuan Chai, Fei Xu, Nora Swaboda, Azzurra Ruggeri

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Although children's sensitivity to others' informativeness emerges early in life, their active information search becomes robustly efficient only around age 10. Young children's difficulty in asking efficient questions has often been hypothesized to be linked to their developing verbal competence and growing vocabulary. In this paper, we offer for the first time a quantitative analysis of 4- to 6-year-old children's information search competence by using a non-verbal version of the 20-questions game, to gain a more comprehensive and fair picture of their active learning abilities. Our results show that, even in this version, preschoolers performed worse than simulated random agents, requiring more queries to reach the solution. However, crucially, preschoolers performed better than the simulated random agents when isolating the extra, unnecessary queries, which are made after only one hypothesis is left. When additionally isolating all the unnecessary queries, children's performance looked on par with that of the simulated optimal agents. Our study replicates and enriches previous research, showing an increase in efficiency across the preschool-aged years, but also a general lack of optimality that seems to be fundamentally driven by children's strong tendency to make unnecessary queries, rather than by their verbal immaturity. We discuss how children's non-optimal, conservative information-search strategies may be adaptive, after all.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1080755
JournalFrontiers in Psychology
Volume13
DOIs
StatePublished - 4 Jan 2023

Keywords

  • active learning
  • cognitive development
  • efficiency
  • information search
  • strategy

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