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Preschoolers favor the creator's label when reasoning about an artifact's function
Authors:Jaswal Vikram K
Institution:Department of Psychology, P.O. Box 400400, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22904-4400, USA. jaswal@virginia.edu
Abstract:The creator of an artifact, by virtue of having made the object, has privileged knowledge about its intended function. Do children recognize that the label an artifact's creator uses can convey this privileged information? 3- and 4-year-olds were presented with an object that looked like a member of one familiar artifact category, but which the speaker referred to with the label of a different familiar category (e.g. a key-like object was called a "spoon"). Children who heard the speaker refer to the object as something she made were more likely to assign its function on the basis of the anomalous label she used than those who heard it referred to as something the speaker found. Thus, even very young children expect a unique connection between the label the creator of an artifact uses and the function she intends it to have.
Keywords:Design stance  Function  Labels  Children  Artifacts  Creator's intent
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