The Role of Language, Appearance, and Culture in Children's Social Category‐Based Induction
- 9 May 2006
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Child Development
- Vol. 77 (3) , 539-553
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8624.2006.00889.x
Abstract
Four studies examined whether Israeli 5‐year‐olds (N=88) and adults (N=48) drew inferences about psychological properties based on a character's social category, personality trait, or physical appearance trait. Study 1 revealed that while children drew inferences mostly by social category, adults did it by personality trait. Study 2 showed that the children's pattern was not due to how the categorical information was conveyed. Studies 3 and 4 demonstrated that for kindergarteners, labels, not appearances, are determinant of the inductive potential of social categories. Studies indicated that “Jew” and “Arab” were the most inductively powerful social categories for both children and adults. The results carry implications for the roles of language, appearances, and culture in the conceptualization of “human kinds.”Keywords
This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- Essentialism, Culture, and Power: Representations of Social ClassJournal of Social Issues, 2003
- Essentialism in Brazilian children's extensions of animal names.Developmental Psychology, 2001
- The development of Israeli children's images of Jews and Arabs and their expression in human figure drawings.Developmental Psychology, 2001
- Culture, domain specificity and conceptual change: Natural kind and artifact conceptsBritish Journal of Developmental Psychology, 1999
- Young children use motive information to make trait inferences.Developmental Psychology, 1998
- Conceptual and linguistic biases in children's word learning.Developmental Psychology, 1998
- The Development of Children's Beliefs about Social and Biological Aspects of Gender DifferencesChild Development, 1996
- The Development of Children's Beliefs about Social and Biological Aspects of Gender DifferencesChild Development, 1996
- Development of social categories and stereotypes in early childhood: The case of “The Arab” concept formation, stereotype and attitudes by Jewish children in IsraelInternational Journal of Intercultural Relations, 1996
- Culture and the self: Implications for cognition, emotion, and motivation.Psychological Review, 1991