Two studies investigated the relative importance of information about intended design and current use on judgments about the function (Experiment 1) or category (Experiment 2) of novel artifacts in preschool children and adults. Adults assigned function and name on the basis of information about design across all conditions, while children’s decisions about function dissociated from decisions about category. Function judgments (in both 4 and 6-year-olds) were neutral between design and current use, both when the current use was idiosyncratic (e.g. performed by just one agent) and conventional (performed by many people; Experiment 1). By contrast, where category judgments were required for the very same objects (Experiment 2), children named...
Gelman and Bloom found that adults and children's object naming was sensitive to how an object was c...
The human ability to make tools and use them to solve problems may not be zoologically unique, but i...
Studies of category-specific disorders have suggested that categories of living and non-living thing...
Two studies investigated the relative importance of information about intended design and current us...
Three experiments addressed the relative importance of original function and current function in art...
Three experiments addressed factors that might influence whether or not young children take into acc...
Research suggests that while information about design is a central feature of older children's artif...
Do young children who seek the conceptual kind of an artifact weigh the plausibility that a current ...
If inferences about the functions intended by object designers guide the way artifacts are categoriz...
Three parallel studies investigated the influence of principle-based inferences and unprincipled sim...
In naming artifacts, do young children infer and reason about the intended functions of the objects?...
This study was an investigation of the role of perceptual and functional features in the development...
Two parallel studies investigated the influence of principle-based and attribute-based similarity re...
Two studies investigated the relationship between learning names and learning concepts in preschool ...
We investigated how parents respond to young children\u27s questions about the identity of artifacts...
Gelman and Bloom found that adults and children's object naming was sensitive to how an object was c...
The human ability to make tools and use them to solve problems may not be zoologically unique, but i...
Studies of category-specific disorders have suggested that categories of living and non-living thing...
Two studies investigated the relative importance of information about intended design and current us...
Three experiments addressed the relative importance of original function and current function in art...
Three experiments addressed factors that might influence whether or not young children take into acc...
Research suggests that while information about design is a central feature of older children's artif...
Do young children who seek the conceptual kind of an artifact weigh the plausibility that a current ...
If inferences about the functions intended by object designers guide the way artifacts are categoriz...
Three parallel studies investigated the influence of principle-based inferences and unprincipled sim...
In naming artifacts, do young children infer and reason about the intended functions of the objects?...
This study was an investigation of the role of perceptual and functional features in the development...
Two parallel studies investigated the influence of principle-based and attribute-based similarity re...
Two studies investigated the relationship between learning names and learning concepts in preschool ...
We investigated how parents respond to young children\u27s questions about the identity of artifacts...
Gelman and Bloom found that adults and children's object naming was sensitive to how an object was c...
The human ability to make tools and use them to solve problems may not be zoologically unique, but i...
Studies of category-specific disorders have suggested that categories of living and non-living thing...