Authors
Susan S Jones, Linda B Smith, Barbara Landau
Publication date
1991/6
Journal
Child development
Volume
62
Issue
3
Pages
499-516
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Description
The ease with which young children learn object nouns suggests that they possess strategies to identify properties critical to lexical category membership. In previous work, young children used a same‐shape criterion to extend new count nouns. The present research tested the generality of this shape bias, 2‐ and 3‐year‐olds were asked either to extend a novel count noun to new instances, or to choose unnamed objects to go together. The objects varied in shape, size, and texture. For half of the subjects, the objects had eyes—a property strongly associated with certain material kinds. If young children know this association, they should attend to texture as well as shape in classifying objects with eyes. With named objects only, both 2‐ and 3‐year‐old children classified eyeless objects by shape and objects with eyes by both shape and texture. The results suggest that very young children possess considerable …
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