Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
918354 Journal of Experimental Child Psychology 2011 21 Pages PDF
Abstract

Developmental studies have provided mixed evidence with regard to the question of whether children consider sample size and sample diversity in their inductive generalizations. Results from four experiments with 105 undergraduates, 105 school-age children (M = 7.2 years), and 105 preschoolers (M = 4.9 years) showed that preschoolers made a higher rate of projections from large samples than from small samples when samples were diverse (Experiments 1 and 3) but not when samples were homogeneous (Experiment 4) and not when the task required a choice between two samples (Experiment 2). Furthermore, when a property occurred in large and diverse samples, preschoolers exhibited a broad pattern of projection, generalizing the property to items from categories not represented in the evidence. In contrast, adults followed a normative pattern of induction and never attributed properties to items from categories not represented in the evidence. School-age children showed a mixed pattern of results.

► Sample size effects on inductive generalization in preschool-age, school-age, and undergraduates. ► Sample size effects were influenced by the context of the inductive problem. ► For preschoolers sample size had the biggest influence for diverse samples. ► Large samples cause children to endorse a non-normative inductive strategy.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Developmental and Educational Psychology
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