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Friedman, Ori; Vondervoort, Julia W.; Defeyter, Margaret A.; Neary, Karen R. – Child Development, 2013
It is impossible to perceive who owns an object; this must be inferred. One way that children make such inferences is through a first possession bias--when two agents each use an object, children judge the object belongs to the one who used it first. Two experiments show that this bias does not result from children directly inferring ownership…
Descriptors: Ownership, Young Children, Inferences, Bias
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Malcolm, Sarah; Defeyter, Margaret A.; Friedman, Ori – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2014
In everyday life, we are often faced with the problem of judging who owns an object. The current experiments show that children and adults base ownership judgments on group stereotypes, which relate kinds of people to kinds of objects. Moreover, the experiments show that reliance on stereotypes can override another means by which people make…
Descriptors: Adults, Ownership, Stereotypes, Inferences
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Friedman, Ori; Neary, Karen R.; Defeyter, Margaret A.; Malcolm, Sarah L. – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2011
Appropriate behavior in relation to an object often requires judging whether it is owned and, if so, by whom. The authors propose accounts of how people make these judgments. Our central claim is that both judgments often involve making inferences about object history. In judging whether objects are owned, people may assume that artifacts (e.g.,…
Descriptors: Ownership, Behavior, Context Effect, Theories