Eleven-Month-Olds Link Sound Properties With Animal Categories
We examined 11-month-olds’ tendency to generalize properties to category members, an ability that may contribute to the inductive reasoning abilities observed in later developmental periods. Across three experiments, we tested 11-month-olds’ (N = 113) generalization of properties within the cat and...
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2020-10-01
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doaj-b144e7f6658a4cea9bd143ea00915b492020-11-25T03:58:58ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782020-10-011110.3389/fpsyg.2020.559390559390Eleven-Month-Olds Link Sound Properties With Animal CategoriesEna VukatanaMichelle S. ZepedaNina AndersonSuzanne CurtinSusan A. GrahamWe examined 11-month-olds’ tendency to generalize properties to category members, an ability that may contribute to the inductive reasoning abilities observed in later developmental periods. Across three experiments, we tested 11-month-olds’ (N = 113) generalization of properties within the cat and dog categories. In each experiment, infants were familiarized to animal–sound pairings (i.e., dog barking; cat meowing) and tested on this association and the generalization of the sound property to new members of the familiarized categories. After familiarization with a single exemplar, 11-month-olds generalized the sound to new category members that were both highly similar and less similar to the familiarized animal (Experiment 1). When familiarized with mismatched animal–sound pairings (Experiment 2; i.e., dog meowing; cat barking), 11-month-olds did not learn or generalize the sound properties, suggesting that infants have pre-existing expectations about the links between the characteristic sound properties and the animal categories. When familiarized with unfamiliar sound–animal pairings (Experiment 3; i.e., dog-unfamiliar sound), 11-month-olds linked the animals with the novel sounds but did not generalize to new category members. Taken together, these findings highlight the conditions under which young infants generalize properties from one exemplar to other category members.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.559390/fullcategorizationcategory–property linksinductive reasoninginfancygeneralization |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Ena Vukatana Michelle S. Zepeda Nina Anderson Suzanne Curtin Susan A. Graham |
spellingShingle |
Ena Vukatana Michelle S. Zepeda Nina Anderson Suzanne Curtin Susan A. Graham Eleven-Month-Olds Link Sound Properties With Animal Categories Frontiers in Psychology categorization category–property links inductive reasoning infancy generalization |
author_facet |
Ena Vukatana Michelle S. Zepeda Nina Anderson Suzanne Curtin Susan A. Graham |
author_sort |
Ena Vukatana |
title |
Eleven-Month-Olds Link Sound Properties With Animal Categories |
title_short |
Eleven-Month-Olds Link Sound Properties With Animal Categories |
title_full |
Eleven-Month-Olds Link Sound Properties With Animal Categories |
title_fullStr |
Eleven-Month-Olds Link Sound Properties With Animal Categories |
title_full_unstemmed |
Eleven-Month-Olds Link Sound Properties With Animal Categories |
title_sort |
eleven-month-olds link sound properties with animal categories |
publisher |
Frontiers Media S.A. |
series |
Frontiers in Psychology |
issn |
1664-1078 |
publishDate |
2020-10-01 |
description |
We examined 11-month-olds’ tendency to generalize properties to category members, an ability that may contribute to the inductive reasoning abilities observed in later developmental periods. Across three experiments, we tested 11-month-olds’ (N = 113) generalization of properties within the cat and dog categories. In each experiment, infants were familiarized to animal–sound pairings (i.e., dog barking; cat meowing) and tested on this association and the generalization of the sound property to new members of the familiarized categories. After familiarization with a single exemplar, 11-month-olds generalized the sound to new category members that were both highly similar and less similar to the familiarized animal (Experiment 1). When familiarized with mismatched animal–sound pairings (Experiment 2; i.e., dog meowing; cat barking), 11-month-olds did not learn or generalize the sound properties, suggesting that infants have pre-existing expectations about the links between the characteristic sound properties and the animal categories. When familiarized with unfamiliar sound–animal pairings (Experiment 3; i.e., dog-unfamiliar sound), 11-month-olds linked the animals with the novel sounds but did not generalize to new category members. Taken together, these findings highlight the conditions under which young infants generalize properties from one exemplar to other category members. |
topic |
categorization category–property links inductive reasoning infancy generalization |
url |
https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.559390/full |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT enavukatana elevenmontholdslinksoundpropertieswithanimalcategories AT michelleszepeda elevenmontholdslinksoundpropertieswithanimalcategories AT ninaanderson elevenmontholdslinksoundpropertieswithanimalcategories AT suzannecurtin elevenmontholdslinksoundpropertieswithanimalcategories AT susanagraham elevenmontholdslinksoundpropertieswithanimalcategories |
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