Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
10452258 Cognitive Development 2010 14 Pages PDF
Abstract
Object functions help young children to organize new artifact categories. However, the scope of their influence is unknown. We explore whether functions highlight property dimensions that are relevant to artifact categories in general. Specifically, using a longitudinal training procedure, we assessed whether experience with functions highlights shape as important for categorization. Seventeen-month-olds were provided experience with novel categories of similarly shaped objects. In Study 1, the function group learned about the objects' shape-based functions; a control group did not. In Study 2, 17-month-olds were trained on the same categories, but the objects' shapes and functions were no longer causally related. Only the function group in Study 1 subsequently used shape reliably when categorizing novel objects. These results suggest that function is instrumental in establishing a 'shape bias' in early categorization and that it does so via conceptually based processes.
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Developmental and Educational Psychology
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