Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
916934 Cognitive Psychology 2012 29 Pages PDF
Abstract

Generics are sentences such as “ravens are black” and “tigers are striped”, which express generalizations concerning kinds. Quantified statements such as “all tigers are striped” or “most ravens are black” also express generalizations, but unlike generics, they specify how many members of the kind have the property in question. Recently, some theorists have proposed that generics express cognitively fundamental/default generalizations, and that quantified statements in contrast express cognitively more sophisticated generalizations (Gelman, 2010 and Leslie, 2008). If this hypothesis is correct, then quantified statements may be remembered as generics. This paper presents four studies with 136 preschool children and 118 adults, demonstrating that adults and preschoolers alike tend to recall quantified statements as generics, thus supporting the hypothesis that generics express cognitively default generalizations.

► Adults and preschoolers were tested for their recall of generalizations about kinds. ► The generalizations were either generics or quantified statements. ► Adults and preschoolers both tended to recall quantified statements as generics. ► These data suggest that generics express cognitively default generalizations.

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