Setters and samoyeds: the emergence of subordinate level categories as a basis for inductive inference in preschool-age children.

Basic level categories are a rich source of inductive inference for children and adults. These 3 experiments examine how preschool-age children partition their inductively rich basic level categories to form subordinate level categories and whether these have inductive potential. Children were taught a novel property about an individual member of a familiar basic level category (e.g., a collie). Then, children's extensions of that property to other objects from the same subordinate (e.g., other collies), basic (e.g., other dogs), and superordinate (e.g., other animals) level categories were examined. The results suggest (a) that contrastive information promotes the emergence of subordinate categories as a basis of inductive inference and (b) that newly established subordinate categories can retain their inductive potential in subsequent reasoning over a week's time.

[1]  U. Neisser Concepts and Conceptual Development: Ecological and Intellectual Factors in Categorization , 1989 .

[2]  D. Billman,et al.  Induction from a single instance: formation of a novel category. , 1990, Journal of experimental child psychology.

[3]  N. Goodman Fact, Fiction, and Forecast , 1955 .

[4]  S. Gelman,et al.  Children's inductive inferences within superordinate categories: the role of language and category structure. , 1988, Child development.

[5]  E. Heit,et al.  Similarity and property effects in inductive reasoning. , 1994, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[6]  Douglas L. Medin,et al.  What's So Essential About Essentialism? A Different Perspective on the Interaction of Perception, Language, and Conceptual Knowledge , 1993 .

[7]  D. Gentner,et al.  Language and the career of similarity. , 1991 .

[8]  S. Sloman When explanations compete: the role of explanatory coherence on judgements of likelihood , 1994, Cognition.

[9]  Carolyn B. Mervis,et al.  Acquisition of subordinate categories by 3-year-olds: The roles of attribute salience, linguistic input, and child characteristics , 1994 .

[10]  Elizabeth F. Shipley,et al.  Categories, hierarchies, and induction , 1993 .

[11]  Wayne D. Gray,et al.  Basic objects in natural categories , 1976, Cognitive Psychology.

[12]  Maureen A. Callanan,et al.  How Parents Label Objects for Young Children: The Role of Input in the Acquisition of Category Hierarchies. , 1985 .

[13]  Maureen A. Callanan,et al.  Parents' descriptions of objects: Potential data for children's inferences about category principles☆ , 1990 .

[14]  D. Medin,et al.  The role of theories in conceptual coherence. , 1985, Psychological review.

[15]  M. Lassaline Constraints on similarity as a constraint on induction. , 1994 .

[16]  Elizabeth F. Shipley,et al.  A constraint on comparisons: Equally detailed alternatives , 1983 .

[17]  L. Oakes,et al.  Preschoolers' questions and parents' explanations: Causal thinking in everyday activity. , 1992 .

[18]  C. Mervis Child-basic object categories and early lexical development. , 1987 .

[19]  E. Markman,et al.  Young children's inductions from natural kinds: the role of categories and appearances. , 1987, Child development.

[20]  S. Gelman,et al.  Mapping the mind: Essentialist beliefs in children: The acquisition of concepts and theories , 1994 .

[21]  S. Gelman,et al.  Mapping the Mind: Domain Specificity In Cognition And Culture , 1994 .

[22]  S. Gelman,et al.  The importance of knowing a dodo is a bird: Categories and infer - ences in two - year olds , 1990 .

[23]  Edward E. Smith,et al.  Category-Based Induction , 1990 .

[24]  Kathy E. Johnson,et al.  Microgenetic analysis of first steps in children's acquisition of expertise on shorebirds. , 1994 .

[25]  Edward E. Smith,et al.  Categories and concepts , 1984 .

[26]  S. Waxman,et al.  Words as Invitations to Form Categories: Evidence from 12- to 13-Month-Old Infants , 1995, Cognitive Psychology.

[27]  Barbara A. Shepperson,et al.  Establishing New Subcategories: The Role of Category Labels and Existing Knowledge , 1991 .

[28]  L. Rips Inductive judgments about natural categories. , 1975 .

[29]  E. Markman,et al.  Categories and induction in young children , 1986, Cognition.

[30]  D L Medin,et al.  Concepts and conceptual structure. , 1989, The American psychologist.

[31]  Sandra R. Waxman,et al.  Linguistic biases and the establishment of conceptual hierarchies: Evidence from preschool children , 1990 .

[32]  A. Ortony,et al.  Similarity and Analogical Reasoning , 1991 .

[33]  J. Coley,et al.  Emerging differentiation of folkbiology and folkpsychology: attributions of biological and psychological properties to living things. , 1995, Child development.

[34]  S. Waxman The dubbing ceremony revisited: Object naming and categorization in infancy and early childhood , 1999 .

[35]  H. Wellman,et al.  Insides and essences: Early understandings of the non-obvious , 1991, Cognition.

[36]  S. Gelman The development of induction within natural kind and artifact categories , 1988, Cognitive Psychology.