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Lany, Jill; Thompson, Abbie; Aguero, Ariel – Developmental Psychology, 2022
Words influence cognition well before infants know their meanings. For example, three-month-olds are more likely to form visually based categories when exemplars are paired with spoken words than with sine-wave tones, a likely precursor to learning symbolic relations between words and their referents. However, it is unclear why words have these…
Descriptors: Infants, Naming, Nonverbal Communication, Classification
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Noles, Nicholaus S. – Developmental Psychology, 2019
This study explores how feature salience and feature centrality influence inductive generalization in 4- and 5-year-old children and adults. Recent reports indicate that enhancing the salience of a feature--specifically, a creature's head--by making it move shifts children's inductions so that they ignore labels and make inferences that are…
Descriptors: Generalization, Logical Thinking, Age Differences, Inferences
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Massey, Christine M.; Gelman, Rochel – Developmental Psychology, 1988
Four-year-olds were reliably accurate about movement potentials for the categories of mammals, nonmammalian animals, statues of animals, wheeled vehicles, and multipart, rigid objects. The three-year-olds' scores were significantly above chance in all categories but animals. Analyses showed that children were concerned about the cause of movement…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Classification, Cognitive Ability, Concept Formation