Personal Information
Entreprise/Lieu de travail
Washington D.C. Metro Area United States
Profession
Associate Professor at The George Washington University
Secteur d’activité
Education
Site Web
http://www.subiaul.com
À propos
My research aims to understand what is unique about human social cognition. Specifically, over the past years my research has focused on young children's ability to rapidly and accurately learn from others and how these skills compare to those of others animals (e.g., great apes). More recently, my colleagues and I have sought to characterize the development of social learning in preschoolers (when children go from being low to high-fidelity imitators) and the cognitive mechanisms supporting these changes.
Mots-clés
social learning
learning
imitation
cognition
emulation
cognitive evolution
cognitive development
child development
social cognition
monkeys
evolution
cognitive imitation
physical cognition
cognitive mechanisms
ghost control
preschool children
goal emulation
cognitive structure
children
great apes
recall
development
motor-spatial imitation
imitation mechanisms
domain-general cognition
domain-specific cognition
chimpanzees
primate cognition
comparative psychology
theory of mind
multiple imitation mechanisms
apes
animal cognition
primates
regression models
preschool
cognitive architecture
selective imitation
working memory
overimitation
tool-use
mosaic cognitive evolution
cognitive specialization
comparative cognition
introspection
metacognition
gorillas
novel imitation
familiar imitation
serial learning
social learning theory
mechanisms
neuroscience
monkey
individual differences
neuroanatomy
comparative neuroscience
precuneus
curiosity
animacy
social cognition children
agency
vocal imitation
imitation faculty
modularity
joint attention
carryover effect
brain evolution
observational learning
social evaluation
image score
reputation
gaze following
numerical cognition
episodic memory
intentional communication
mirror self-recognition
cumulative culture
cultural evolution
education
Tout plus
Documents
(17)Personal Information
Entreprise/Lieu de travail
Washington D.C. Metro Area United States
Profession
Associate Professor at The George Washington University
Secteur d’activité
Education
Site Web
http://www.subiaul.com
À propos
My research aims to understand what is unique about human social cognition. Specifically, over the past years my research has focused on young children's ability to rapidly and accurately learn from others and how these skills compare to those of others animals (e.g., great apes). More recently, my colleagues and I have sought to characterize the development of social learning in preschoolers (when children go from being low to high-fidelity imitators) and the cognitive mechanisms supporting these changes.
Mots-clés
social learning
learning
imitation
cognition
emulation
cognitive evolution
cognitive development
child development
social cognition
monkeys
evolution
cognitive imitation
physical cognition
cognitive mechanisms
ghost control
preschool children
goal emulation
cognitive structure
children
great apes
recall
development
motor-spatial imitation
imitation mechanisms
domain-general cognition
domain-specific cognition
chimpanzees
primate cognition
comparative psychology
theory of mind
multiple imitation mechanisms
apes
animal cognition
primates
regression models
preschool
cognitive architecture
selective imitation
working memory
overimitation
tool-use
mosaic cognitive evolution
cognitive specialization
comparative cognition
introspection
metacognition
gorillas
novel imitation
familiar imitation
serial learning
social learning theory
mechanisms
neuroscience
monkey
individual differences
neuroanatomy
comparative neuroscience
precuneus
curiosity
animacy
social cognition children
agency
vocal imitation
imitation faculty
modularity
joint attention
carryover effect
brain evolution
observational learning
social evaluation
image score
reputation
gaze following
numerical cognition
episodic memory
intentional communication
mirror self-recognition
cumulative culture
cultural evolution
education
Tout plus