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Core knowledge and its limits: The domain of food
Authors:Kristin Shutts  Kirsten F. Condry  Elizabeth S. Spelke
Affiliation:a Department of Psychology, Harvard University, William James Hall, 33 Kirkland Street, Cambridge, MA 02138, United States
b Psychology Department, R.I.T., 96 Lomb Memorial Drive Rochester, NY 14623, United States
c Department of Psychology, Yale University, Box 208205, New Haven, CT 06520, United States
Abstract:Adults, preschool children, and nonhuman primates detect and categorize food objects according to substance information, conveyed primarily by color and texture. In contrast, they perceive and categorize artifacts primarily by shape and rigidity. The present experiments investigated the origins of this distinction. Using a looking time procedure, Experiment 1 extended previous findings that rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) generalize learning about novel food objects by color over changes in shape. Six additional experiments then investigated whether human infants show the same signature patterns of perception and generalization. Nine-month-old infants failed to detect food objects in accord with their intrinsic properties, in contrast to rhesus monkeys tested in previous research with identical displays. Eight-month-old infants did not privilege substance information over other features when categorizing foods, even though they detected and remembered this information. Moreover, infants showed the same property generalization patterns when presented with foods and tools. The category-specific patterns of perception and categorization shown by human adults, children, and adult monkeys therefore were not found in human infants, providing evidence for limits to infants’ domains of knowledge.
Keywords:Core knowledge   Conceptual development   Infants   Domain-specificity   Categorization   Food
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