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A developmental examination of the conceptual structure of animal, artifact, and human social categories across two cultural contexts
Authors:Marjorie Rhodes  Susan A. Gelman
Affiliation:University of Michigan, 2422 East Hall, 530 Church Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, United States
Abstract:Previous research indicates that the ontological status that adults attribute to categories varies systematically by domain. For example, adults view distinctions between different animal species as natural and objective, but view distinctions between different kinds of furniture as more conventionalized and subjective. The present work (N = 435; ages 5-18) examined the effects of domain, age, and cultural context on beliefs about the naturalness vs. conventionality of categories. Results demonstrate that young children, like adults, view animal categories as natural kinds, but artifact categories as more conventionalized. For human social categories (gender and race), beliefs about naturalness and conventionality were predicted by interactions between cultural context and age. Implications for the origins of social categories and theories of conceptual development will be discussed.
Keywords:Cognitive development   Natural kinds   Social categories   Concepts   Categorization   Culture   Gender   Race   Naï  ve biology   Artifacts
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