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Developmental changes in judgments of authentic objects
Authors:Brandy N. Frazier  Susan A. Gelman
Affiliation:aUniversity of Hawaii at Manoa, Department of Psychology, 2430 Campus Road, Honolulu, HI 96822, United States;bUniversity of Michigan, Department of Psychology, 530 Church Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48014, United States
Abstract:This study examined the development of an understanding of authenticity among 112 children (preschoolers, kindergarten, 1st graders, and 4th graders) and 119 college students. Participants were presented with pairs of photographs depicting authentic and non-authentic objects and asked to pick which one belongs in a museum and which one they would want to have. Results suggest that both children and adults recognize the special nature of authentic objects by reporting that they belong in a museum. However, this belief broadens with age, at first just for famous associations (preschool), then also for original creations (kindergarten), and finally for personal associations as well (4th grade). At all ages, an object's authentic nature is distinct from its desirability. Thus, from an early age, children appear to understand that the historical path of an authentic object affects its nature. This work demonstrates the importance of non-obvious properties in children's concepts. For preschool as well as older children, history (a non-visible property) adds meaning beyond the material or functional worth of an object.
Keywords:Authenticity   Children   Artifacts   Ownership   Concepts
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