PLEASE NOTE: This talk will take place on a different day than usual. Our seminar room has a limited capacity so please arrive early to ensure you will get a seat! The talk will start promptly at 5 PM.
The next talk in the CDC Seminar series will be given by:
Sarah-Jane Leslie, Princeton University
Date: THURSDAY, December 9, 2011, 5 PM
Location: Cognitive Development Center, Hattyś u. 14, 3rd floor
Generics as cognitive defaults
Abstract: Generic sentences express generalizations about kinds, such as "tigers
are striped", "ducks lay eggs", and "ticks carry Lyme disease". I
present and review emerging evidence from adults and children that
suggests that generics articulate cognitively default generalizations --
i.e., they express basic, early-developing inductive generalizations
concerning kinds. Further evidence suggests that these generalizations
don't depend solely on information about prevalence. For example, "ticks
carry Lyme disease" is accepted, but "books are paperbacks" is not,
despite the fact - well-known and acknowledged by participants - that
paperbacks are much more prevalent among books than
Lyme-disease-carrying is among ticks. Similarly, both adults and
preschoolers understand that, e.g., only female ducks lay eggs, yet they
are more likely to accept "ducks lay eggs" than "ducks are female".
Rather than depending solely on information about prevalence, these
primitive generic generalizations are sensitive to a number of
content-based factors, such as whether the property in question is
dangerous or otherwise striking (as in "ticks carry Lyme disease"), or
is an essential or characteristic property of the kind (as in "ducks lay
eggs"). This suggests that our most basic means of forming inductive
generalizations about kinds is not guided by prevalence alone, but also
reflects our nature as learners.
Cognitive Science Events at CEU: http://cognitivescience.ceu.hu/events