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Neary, Karen R.; Friedman, Ori – Child Development, 2014
This study provides evidence that children give priority to ownership when judging who should use an object. Children (N = 269) and adults (N = 154) considered disputes over objects. In disputes between a character using an object and the owner of the object, children, as young as 3 years and as old as 7 years, sided with the owner, and did so…
Descriptors: Young Children, Ownership, Childhood Attitudes, Child Development
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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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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
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Neary, Karen R.; Friedman, Ori; Burnstein, Corinna L. – Developmental Psychology, 2009
Owners control permission--they forbid and permit others to use their property. So it is reasonable to assume that someone controlling permission over an object is its owner. The authors tested whether preschoolers infer ownership in this way. In the first experiment, 4- and 5-year-olds, but not 3-year-olds, chose as owner of an object a character…
Descriptors: Ownership, Prevention, Personality, Preschool Children
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Friedman, Ori; Neary, Karen R. – Cognition, 2008
A basic problem of daily life is determining who owns what. One way that people may solve this problem is by relying on a "first possession" heuristic, according to which the first person who possesses an object is its owner, even if others subsequently possess the object. We investigated preschoolers' use of this heuristic in five experiments. In…
Descriptors: Ownership, Heuristics, Toddlers, Personality