Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2903900144> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W2903900144 endingPage "15" @default.
- W2903900144 startingPage "1" @default.
- W2903900144 abstract "People often think of categories in terms of their most representative examples (e.g., robin for BIRD). Thus, determining which exemplars are most representative is a fundamental cognitive process that shapes how people use concepts to navigate the world. The present studies (N = 669; ages 5 years - adulthood) revealed developmental change in this important component of cognition. Studies 1-2 found that young children view exemplars with extreme values of characteristic features (e.g., the very fastest cheetah) as most representative of familiar biological categories; the tendency to view average exemplars in this manner (e.g., the average-speeded cheetah) emerged slowly across age. Study 3 examined the mechanisms underlying these judgments, and found that participants of all ages viewed extreme exemplars as representative of novel animal categories when they learned that the variable features fulfilled category-specific adaptive needs, but not otherwise. Implications for developmental changes in conceptual structure and biological reasoning are discussed." @default.
- W2903900144 created "2018-12-22" @default.
- W2903900144 creator A5076825080 @default.
- W2903900144 creator A5086682316 @default.
- W2903900144 date "2019-05-01" @default.
- W2903900144 modified "2023-10-12" @default.
- W2903900144 title "Is the most representative skunk the average or the stinkiest? Developmental changes in representations of biological categories" @default.
- W2903900144 cites W1578331796 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W1665133007 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W1863482424 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W1963693922 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W1963932889 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W1966115499 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W1968731657 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W1973470576 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W1974430715 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W1976323611 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W1981788920 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W1982088476 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W1989415743 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W1989500915 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W1994655610 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W1995703581 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2000255081 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2006189665 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2007978164 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2008462575 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2012532754 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2016429292 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2017294267 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2021486007 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2023182327 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2023614000 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2028495719 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2036202604 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2040742624 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2045725927 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2049070516 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2053932901 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2055330356 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2059336778 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2059362709 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2063155697 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2067619642 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2073345018 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2077479462 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2078341485 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2081070624 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2083486220 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2091323952 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2094379083 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2099425484 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2100497770 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2102602565 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2111958325 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2112404013 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2116734544 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2124373407 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2124678625 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2125890461 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2128689257 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2135251234 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2140508081 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2144544542 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2148886952 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2152893833 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2156330671 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2156975004 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2159344473 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2162018888 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2164797238 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2169523107 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2169632366 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2175082338 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2322579942 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2584849831 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2605772560 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2618478924 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2618625926 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2697454059 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2785502021 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W2794479611 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W4231372856 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W4232370398 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W4234313254 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W4241027858 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W4241984388 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W4244531506 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W4251374259 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W4251441988 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W4255904479 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W792941345 @default.
- W2903900144 cites W922905494 @default.
- W2903900144 doi "https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cogpsych.2018.12.004" @default.
- W2903900144 hasPubMedCentralId "https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/6487486" @default.
- W2903900144 hasPubMedId "https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30677631" @default.
- W2903900144 hasPublicationYear "2019" @default.
- W2903900144 type Work @default.