Previous research has shown that human infants and young children are sensitive to the boundaries of certain social groups, which supports the idea that the capacity to represent social categories constitutes a fundamental characteristic of the human cognitive system. However, the function this capacity serves is still debated. We propose that during social categorization the human mind aims at mapping out social groups defined by a certain set of shared knowledge. An eye-tracking paradigm was designed to test whether two-year-old children differentially associate conventional versus non-conventional tool use with language-use, reflecting an organization of information that is induced by cues of shared knowledge. Children first watched vide...
Fourteen-month-olds selectively imitated a sub-efficient means (illuminating a lightbox by a head-to...
What do infants and young children tend to see in their everyday lives? Relatively little work has ...
To differentiate the use of simple associations from use of explicitly reasoned selective social lea...
Previous research has shown that human infants and young children are sensitive to the boundaries of...
Determining which dimensions of social classification are culturally significant is a developmental ...
A longstanding empirical question is how children classify people into meaningful social categories....
Social categorization has vast implications for myriad aspects of human social life, and studying it...
This dissertation explores the development of intergroup cognition across eight experiments. Part I ...
Navigating the social world requires sophisticated cognitive machinery that, although present quite ...
Children learn their earliest words through social interaction, but it is unknown how much they rely...
Human social interaction depends on individuals identifying the common ground they have with others,...
This dissertation examines how the ontological status that people attribute to categories varies by ...
Categorization is a vital aspect of human cognition that helps guide learning and knowledge. However...
When meeting someone for the very first time one spontaneously categorizes the seen person on the ba...
The present study was designed to test the relative weight of different types of category markers in...
Fourteen-month-olds selectively imitated a sub-efficient means (illuminating a lightbox by a head-to...
What do infants and young children tend to see in their everyday lives? Relatively little work has ...
To differentiate the use of simple associations from use of explicitly reasoned selective social lea...
Previous research has shown that human infants and young children are sensitive to the boundaries of...
Determining which dimensions of social classification are culturally significant is a developmental ...
A longstanding empirical question is how children classify people into meaningful social categories....
Social categorization has vast implications for myriad aspects of human social life, and studying it...
This dissertation explores the development of intergroup cognition across eight experiments. Part I ...
Navigating the social world requires sophisticated cognitive machinery that, although present quite ...
Children learn their earliest words through social interaction, but it is unknown how much they rely...
Human social interaction depends on individuals identifying the common ground they have with others,...
This dissertation examines how the ontological status that people attribute to categories varies by ...
Categorization is a vital aspect of human cognition that helps guide learning and knowledge. However...
When meeting someone for the very first time one spontaneously categorizes the seen person on the ba...
The present study was designed to test the relative weight of different types of category markers in...
Fourteen-month-olds selectively imitated a sub-efficient means (illuminating a lightbox by a head-to...
What do infants and young children tend to see in their everyday lives? Relatively little work has ...
To differentiate the use of simple associations from use of explicitly reasoned selective social lea...