Literature DB >> 9787062

Studies in inductive inference in infancy.

J M Mandler1, L McDonough.   

Abstract

Imitation of events was used to explore the inductive generalizations that 14-month-olds have made about animals, vehicles, and household artifacts. In Experiment 1 infants generalized domain-specific properties such as drinking to animals but not to vehicles, whereas they generalized domain-neutral properties such as going into a building to exemplars from both domains. The next four experiments showed that infants tend to interpret animal events very broadly, for example, construing a dog merely as a land animal rather than as a differentiated kind in its own right. Infants were somewhat more selective in their construals of vehicles. Experiment 6 showed that 14-month-olds also generalize "basic-level properties" very broadly. For example, they chose a pan to demonstrate drinking almost as often as a cup and fed a bone to a bird as often as to a dog. By 20 months, their selections narrowed appropriately for artifacts, but were still overgeneralized for natural kinds. The experiments indicate that infants tend to generalize their early experiences broadly across domains, often across exemplars that have a variety of different surface characteristics. The data suggest that it is the conceptual meaning of objects, rather than their physical features, that controls early associative learning. Copyright 1998 Academic Press.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1998        PMID: 9787062     DOI: 10.1006/cogp.1998.0691

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cogn Psychol        ISSN: 0010-0285            Impact factor:   3.468


  13 in total

Review 1.  Properties of inductive reasoning.

Authors:  E Heit
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2000-12

2.  Function revisited: how infants construe functional features in their representation of objects.

Authors:  Lisa M Oakes; Kelly L Madole
Journal:  Adv Child Dev Behav       Date:  2008

3.  The development of object categorization in young children: hierarchical inclusiveness, age, perceptual attribute, and group versus individual analyses.

Authors:  Marc H Bornstein; Martha E Arterberry
Journal:  Dev Psychol       Date:  2010-03

4.  Developmental Origins of Biological Explanations: The case of infants' internal property bias.

Authors:  Hernando Taborda-Osorio; Erik W Cheries
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2017-10

5.  Developmental differences in the naming of contextually non-categorical objects.

Authors:  Mehmet Ozcan
Journal:  J Psycholinguist Res       Date:  2012-02

6.  Visual segmentation of complex naturalistic structures in an infant eye-tracking search task.

Authors:  Karola Schlegelmilch; Annie E Wertz
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2022-04-01       Impact factor: 3.240

7.  Specificity ratings for Italian data.

Authors:  Marianna Marcella Bolognesi; Tommaso Caselli
Journal:  Behav Res Methods       Date:  2022-09-26

8.  Young infants' reasoning about physical events involving inert and self-propelled objects.

Authors:  Yuyan Luo; Lisa Kaufman; Renée Baillargeon
Journal:  Cogn Psychol       Date:  2009-02-20       Impact factor: 3.468

9.  Categorical structure among shared features in networks of early-learned nouns.

Authors:  Thomas T Hills; Mounir Maouene; Josita Maouene; Adam Sheya; Linda Smith
Journal:  Cognition       Date:  2009-07-02

10.  Particularities and universalities of the emergence of inductive generalization.

Authors:  Rebeca Puche-Navarro; Lilian Patricia Rodríguez-Burgos
Journal:  Integr Psychol Behav Sci       Date:  2015-03
View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.