Analogical reasoning in 2-year-olds: The development of access and relational inference |
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Affiliation: | 1. Institute for Aerospace Studies, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada;2. Luleå University of Technology, Kiruna, Sweden;1. University of British Columbia, Canada;2. Centro de Investigación Básica en Psicología, Uruguay;3. Johns Hopkins University, United States |
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Abstract: | Eighty-four 24- and 30-month-old children were tested with two analogy tasks: formal and problem solving. Experiment 1 included three Groups: relations specified, relations unspecified, and associative control (no exposure to base relations). In Experiment 2 the relation that linked that a- and b-terms in formal problems was explicitly shown in order to reduce relational inference demands. In Experiment 1, children responded systematically to the formal problems when given two chances to answer each question. In Experiment 2, children were systematic on their first responses. In the problem-solving task the rates of spontaneous analogies produced were similar to those seen in older children. However, unlike older children, 2-year-olds benefited minimally from prompts. We believe this may indicate that 2-year-olds have difficulty explicitly controlling their analogical activity. We conclude early analogical abilities may be limited by weak relational inference abilities and difficulty intentionally initiating access. |
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