Affiliation:
1. University of Magdeburg, Germany
Abstract
This paper investigates whether preverbal children form categories at different levels of abstraction in any specific sequence. In a longitudinal study, 20 infants were each tested twice, at 8 and 12 months of age. Half of the children solved a global-level task (animals-furniture), followed by a basic-level task (either dogs-birds, or chairs-tables) during each session. The other half received the basic-level task only. During familiarisation, all infants freely explored a series of four different exemplars from the same category presented one at a time. Infants saw all objects twice, for a total of eight trials. During the test phase, a new exemplar from the familiar category was presented, followed by a different-category exemplar. At 8 months of age, children discriminated between categories in the global-level task, but failed to do so in the basic-level task. At 12 months of age, infants recognised a category change in the basic-level task, but treated both test items as equally new in the global-level task. These findings support the hypothesis that infants younger than 1 year of age show a global-to-basic-level shift in category formation.
Subject
Developmental and Educational Psychology,Life-span and Life-course Studies,Developmental Neuroscience,Social Psychology,Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Education
Cited by
86 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
1. The Argument from Prepared Learning;The Building Blocks of Thought;2024-08-22
2. The Evolution of Fodor’s Case against Concept Learning;The Building Blocks of Thought;2024-08-22
3. Conclusion to Part III;The Building Blocks of Thought;2024-08-22
4. Embodied Cognition;The Building Blocks of Thought;2024-08-22
5. Coda;The Building Blocks of Thought;2024-08-22