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Slide 37 updated Animals

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Chairs & Beds. 7-11 months. Dogs & Cats. 7 -9 months. Age. Failures at within-domain categorization ... Kind domains (dog, cat) distinguished later ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Slide 37 updated Animals


1
Slide 37 updated!Animals InferenceDo
children have intuitive knowledge of biology?
  • What does the child know about the world?
  • Is the childs mind different from the adults
    mind, or does the child just know less?
  • Does the child come factory equipped with any
    knowledge of the world?

2
What kinds of things are there?
  • Natural kinds
  • animate (all are living)
  • people (definitely intentional agents)
  • animals (which are intentional agents?)
  • inanimate
  • plants (inanimate but living)
  • substances (water, quartz, pearls...)
  • Artifacts (human-made machines, tools...)
  • inanimate, not living
  • Natural features? Mountains, rivers...

3
What kind of explanations are there?
  • Intentional stance (for people, animals)
  • intuitive psychology Theory of Mind Mech.
  • Physical stance (for anything, but particularly
    inanimate)
  • intuitive physics object mechanics
  • Design stance (for artifacts but does it also
    apply to living things?
  • Is there an intuitive biology?
  • Essentialism (for substances, animals, people
    social groups? (ethnic, coalitions))

4
How do babies carve up the world into categories?
What do they know about those categories?
  • Then and now...
  • Then Perception drives everything (Piaget
    (Classical concepts), Rosch (Family resemblance)
  • Perception precedes category formation, and
    drives it.
  • Inferences will follow judgments of perceptual
    similarity
  • Perceptually derived categories come in first
    superordinate ones (e.g., animal come last)
  • Learning is bottom up categories built from
    inductive generalizations from perception
  • No factory-equipped concepts (no innate ideas)

5
How do babies carve up the world into categories?
What do they know about those categories?
  • Now Babies carve world using abstract categories
  • Global domains (e.g, animal versus artifact)
    precede acquisition of basic level categories
    (tiger, car) in infants (Mandler)
  • Categories not built by perception perceptual
    cues activate the appropriate evolved category
  • Movement cues provide cut on world, skeletal
    knowledge with correlational learning filling in
    details (3-4 year olds, Rochel Gelman)
  • Kind category can over-ride perceptual similarity
    in making inferences (3-4 year olds, Markman and
    Susan Gelman)

6
Habituated On
7
Infants. 3-4 month olds can form perceptual
categories
  • E.g., Shown photos of cats, they distinguish
    tigers
  • But does this mean they know what a cat is? Do
    they make different inferences about tigers and
    cats?
  • Or do they merely pattern recognize?

Puzzle Given line drawings, dont distinguish
these...
8
Does it matter what you use in testing?
  • Realistic photos?
  • Line drawings?
  • What about toy models?
  • What about handling rather than looking time?

9
Jean Mandler Global domains first in infancy
  • Habituation tasks
  • Using looking time
  • Using object manipulation
  • Realistic toys
  • Object manipulation tasks show different results
    from looking time tasks. E.g.
  • Habituate on photos of cats, they dishabituate
    to photo of a tiger
  • Habituate on handling a variety of cat toys, they
    do not dishabituate on tiger toy

10
Distinguishing global domains Animals versus
vehicles
  • Habituation tasks, object manipulation
  • E.g. Birds and planes perceptually very similar
  • 7 months old babies distinguish birds from
    planes
  • Do not distinguish among mammals
  • do distinguish land animals from birds

11
Global domains distinguished (Some) Life forms
distinguished
12
Global domains before kind categories
13
Global domains before kind categoriesImitation
studies (9-14 months)
  • Do global domains provide stopping rules for
    inductive inferences?
  • Model gives dog a drink from a cup.
  • baby has choice of rabbit or truck.
  • Will model to rabbit, not truck
  • if given choice of cat or dog, is just as likely
    to use cat as dog
  • also aardvark, anteaters, birds, fish (never seen
    a fish drinking)
  • will not give drink to a flying tiger airplane,
    even though tiger face on it. Global as stopping
    rule!

14
Global domains before kind categoriesImitation
studies (9-14 months)
  • Is it the child just playing the experimenters
    game? (demand characteristics?)
  • Will child model anything you doeven if it
    crosses a global domain boundary?
  • If you model giving a CAR a drink
  • infants reluctant to imitate this

15
Global domains before kind categoriesImitation
studies (9-14 months)
  • What about vehicles?
  • model puts key to a car
  • baby has choice of rabbit or airplane
  • Baby will model to airplane, not rabbit
  • has never seen key put to an airplane,
    helicopter, etc.
  • If you model keying an animal,
  • infants reluctant to imitate this

16
Global domains before kind categoriesImitation
studies (9-14 months)
  • Control condition
  • What if you model something appropriate to both
    animals and vehicles, such as going into a
    building?
  • no preference for animal or vehicle in imitation
  • Shows that preferences for selective imitation
    with animals versus vehicles represent real
    distinctions and global-domain stopping rules.

17
Global domains before kind categoriesImitation
studies (9-14 months)
  • Causal properties matter
  • use mug to give a drink
  • just as likely to use a pan, crib or bathtub
  • use anything that can contain
  • Selective imitation by 9 months, strong by 14
  • By 20 months they start restricting to basic
    level categories.

18
Global domains before kind categories
  • Relation to adult conceptual system?
  • Semantic dementia reverse of developmental
    pattern
  • First lose distinction between (e.g.) dog cat
    (land animals)
  • Later lose mammal versus bird
  • Last animal versus artifact
  • Global domains primary. In development, finer
    distinctions made after global ones
  • Global most buffered against assaults
  • First in, last out

19
Global domains before kind categories
  • Opposite of prediction for
  • Classical view of concepts
  • Family resemblance view
  • On these earlier views, perception drives
    conceptual development
  • First perception builds specific categories
  • Generalizing to larger domain (animal or vehicle)
    comes later
  • Mandler Global domains come first, and guide
    further inferences
  • Kind domains (dog, cat) distinguished later
  • Global domain guides inductive inference
    (imitation studies)

20
How do children generalize properties?
  • by perceptual similarity?
  • by basic object level?
  • by kind? (e.g., bat vs. bird)
  • by global kind only? (e.g., animal versus
    artifact)
  • Within a natural kind category, which properties
    are generalized?
  • all of them?
  • only ones appropriate to a kind?
  • What do we know from Mandler Markman?

21
How do children generalize properties?
  • About animals, they generalized by kind
  • internal organs, method of respiration, feeding
    habits, behavior (lt 14months global kind)
  • But they did not use kind category to generalize
    weight, visibility at night, going into building
  • Specificity of this pattern suggests they have
    intuitive theories about animals (and possibly
    minerals?)
  • About natural kind substances
  • internal structure, chemical properties, physical
    properties
  • About vehicles, they generalize
  • Keying, but not drinking... (lt14 months)

22
Can children use surface properties to predict
self-generated motion? Ages 3-4 (R. Gelman)
  • Can it move itself up and down a hill?
  • Color photos, unfamiliar things
  • Animals Displaying lizard, spiny anteater
  • Statues with familiar, animal-like forms parts
    (bird vessel, figurine w/ insect eyes
  • Rigid complex objects (home gym)
  • Wheeled objects (old bicycle)

23
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24
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25
Piaget thought No understanding of causal
mechanisms until 6 years
  • But 3-4 year old children, 17/20 used these
    causal rules of motion
  • all animals can move themselves and all inanimate
    objects require an external agent or source to
    move them
  • choosy variant of above (youngest children)
    sometimes animal cant go up hill because there
    is a mismatch between it and task, e.g., the
    animal is too little, or hill too big. Details
    of context mattered but same basic rule (animal
    could do less strenuous things by itself) (5/17)

26
Piaget thought No understanding of causal
mechanism until 6 years
  • But talk of 3-4 year old children
  • Causal analysis of motion
  • concern about causal conditions and whether
    animate.
  • All inanimate talk about absence of agents or
    parts needed for self-generated motion.
  • Animate some talk about movement-enabling parts.
    (Even claimed they could see limbs that were not
    visiblefeet on spiny anteater)

27
Children just focusing on what is salient?
  • What do adults find salient?
  • When adults asked to pair target items with ones
    most similar, paired statues of animals with
    animals
  • No adult pairing based on causal basis of motion
  • Children shift their answers depending on
    whether asked about motion or what looks most
    alike
  • Would often claim they could see animates
    walking, jumping... Also took trouble to point
    out that inanimates were NOT walking moving (odd)

28
Learning predictive validity of cues in a domain?
  • Motion-based skeletal theory allowing acquisition
    of knowledge of predictive surface features?
  • Domain-specific principle (self-generated motion,
    contingent reactitivy) defines domain
  • Then domain-general correlational mechanism
    computes features correlated with each domain???
  • (Or some features (furry, scaly versus metalic)
    part of babys early domain-boundaries? No one
    knows...)

29
How many domain-specific inference systems do
young children have?
  • Susan Carey Only 2!
  • Theory of mind (intuitive psychology)
  • Object mechanics (intuitive physics)
  • Do children also have an intuitive biology?
  • Domain-specific principles they apply to
    biological entitiesprinciples beyond what is
    found in intuitive psychology and intuitive
    physics?
  • Springer, Keil, Barrett Yes

30
Stimuli with self-propulsion direction
Eye-like stimuli
ID
EDD
Dyadic representations (desire, goal)
Dyadic represent-ations (see)
Triadic representations
SAM
Full range of mental state concepts, expressed in
M-representations
Knowledge of the mental, stored used as a theory
ToMM
31
Intuitive biology Questions
  • An understanding of kinship and inheritance?
  • An understanding of physiological versus
    psychological causes? (e.g., disease versus
    upset?)
  • Do they apply the design stance to living
    things?
  • Living things have functional parts, parts that
    are good for them
  • Do children have other biological concepts?
  • Predator-prey interactions?
  • Death?

32
Induction experiments
  • Can tell us how children reason
  • Do they have theories about how the world works?
  • Animal 1 has trait X (Exemplar animal)
  • 2 Target animals
  • Does Animal 2 have trait X?
  • Does Animal 3 have trait X
  • Animal 2 may look like Animal 1 Animal 3 may
    look different but share some other relationship
  • Test perceptual similarity versus other
    relationship

33
What do children understand about kinship and
biological inheritance? (4-5 years old)
  • Induction experiments (Ken Springer)
  • Do children induce properties using only
    perceptual similarity or also kinship?
  • Does it matter which properties?
  • Biological properties (stable, physical)
  • Can see in the dark, has hairy ears, has tiny
    bones inside, eats small weeds
  • Non-biological properties Scrapes on legs from
    running in bushes, likes to crawl in really tall
    grass, very dirty from playing in mud, knows a
    really good place to find food

34
Heres a duck. She can see in the dark. So when
it is nightime, she can see things outside. She
can see in the dark.
Heres another duck. (similar) Even though he
looks just like this duck, he comes from a
different family. Do you think he can see in the
dark, like she can?
Heres another duck. (dissimilar) Hes the baby
of this duck. So even though he doesnt look
like her, hes her baby. Do you think he can see
things in the dark, like she can?
35
Can kinship guide induction? For biological
properties...
  • When no kinship specified, induction along
    similarity
  • When kinship specified, induction along kinship
    lines, against similarity
  • Is it just a social relationship specified, or
    specifically kinship?
  • Heres another duck. He looks like this duck,
    and hes this ducks best friend. So they come
    from different families, but they are best
    friends. Do you think he can see in the dark,
    like she can?
  • Still go with kinship

36
What about non-biological properties?
  • Children do not consider kin any more or less
    likely to share non-biological properties
  • So kinship implies shared biological properties,
    not shared properties in general
  • Looking like some very specific knowledge of the
    biological world...

37
Carey Only psychological causality at 5
yearsKeil They can distinguish psychological
from physiological causes
  • Disease What can you catch from someone after
    being in close contact for the week-end?
  • Contrast psychological physiological (an
    unusual mental state vs. an unusual functional
    biological state)
  • Little girl who suddenly developed the false
    belief that her hands were dirty, and kept
    washing them all the time. Hand became red and
    oozy
  • Physiological outcome, but caused by a mental
    state (i.e. a psychological state)
  • Even 4 year olds Not contagious!

38
Do children distinguish functional from
intentional explanations? (germs versus poison)
Frank Keil
  • Functional description
  • Theres this thing that needs to get inside you
    and use parts of your body to make you sick
  • Intentional description
  • Theres this thing that has goals and desires.
    It wants to get inside you and make you sick.
  • Mechanical description
  • Theres this thing that rubs around inside your
    body causing sickness through mechanical damage,
    such as abrasion

39
Can it have babies? Is it alive? Does it have
complex innards? Can it move on its own?
This looks like it favors Carey no biology. But
40
Does it know what it is doing?
Only intentional knows! (Favors Keil)
41
Applying intentional stance to everything?
  • No. Thing with goals and desires knows what it
    is doing. Thing that needs to get inside and use
    body parts does not know what it is doing
  • If only one domain (intuitive psych), both should
    know
  • Not simply equating disease agents with
    prototypical animals or humans, which know what
    they are doing
  • Even youngest know a thing can be biological
    (alive, move, reproduce, innards) without being
    sentient

42
Design stance and biology
  • Animals and plants have adaptive properties that
    are functional
  • The property is there because it solves a problem
    for the organism
  • Teeth for eating, hands for grasping, stomach for
    digesting
  • Tools have properties that are functional
  • The property is there because it solves a problem
    for the person who designed the tool
  • Do children apply the design stance to biological
    things?

43
Design stance Do living things have functional
parts? (5-7 years)
  • Two people are talking about why plants/
    emeralds are green. This person says it is
    because it is better for the plants to be green
    and it helps there be more plants. This person
    says it is because there are tiny parts in plants
    that when mixed together give them a green
    color.
  • Which reason is a better one for plants /
    emeralds?
  • Plants better for it preferred 2.5 times as
    often
  • Emeralds mechanical preferred 5 times as often

44
Design stance Do living things have functional
parts? (5-7 years)
  • Show almost identical pictures
  • Prickly plant and prickly mineral
  • Almost only difference is the label
  • Both are prickly, but only one is prickly
    because being prickly is good for it. Which one?
  • Even 5 year olds prefer good for it for plants
    and animals
  • Evidence of design stance (parts there because
    they serve a purpose)
  • Good for the plant/animal, not good for a
    user / designer, as with tools

45
What counts as biology?
  • Just physiology?
  • Should our evolved inference mechanisms mirror
    divisions in a university?(!)
  • What is important for a hunter-gatherer to know
    about living things?
  • What about predator-prey interactions?
  • What about adaptive properties of animals that
    are functional?

46
Is intuitive biology a unified domain? Or are
there islands of precocial inference?
  • Predator-prey interactions 3-4 years old
  • Same good understanding in urban Berlin and among
    hunter-horticulturalists in Amazon (Barrett)
  • Claim Death is not really understood til age 10
  • Understood as cessation of physiological
    properties
  • Is this the concept of death an evolved organism
    should have?
  • How about Death as the permanent cessation of
    the ability to act? (Death vs. sleep, etc)
  • Test with animals rather than people

47
5 year olds Understand death as permanent
cessation of ability to act
  • 3 4 year olds
  • Understand run, eat alive
  • Problems with time only

48
What kind of explanations are there?
  • Intentional stance (for people, animals)
  • intuitive psychology Theory of Mind Mech.
  • Physical stance (for anything, but particularly
    inanimate)
  • intuitive physics object mechanics
  • Design stance (for artifacts seems to also apply
    to living things)
  • Is there an intuitive biology? Or islands of
    precocial inference?
  • Essentialism (for substances, animals, people
    social groups? (ethnic, coalitions))

49
Animals inference Is there an intuitive
biology?
  • What does the child know about the world?
  • Surprising amount! Kinship design stance some
    biological properties, not others
  • How does the child come to know what she knows?
  • Global domains first, stopping rules for
    inference
  • Correlational after global domain is
    distinguished?
  • Is the childs mind different from the adults
    mind, or does the child just know less?
  • Does the child come factory equipped with any
    knowledge of the world?

50
Questions to think about throughout 142...
  • What does the child know about the world?
  • How does the child come to know what she knows?
  • Is the childs mind different from the adults
    mind, or does the child just know less?
  • Does the child come factory equipped with any
    knowledge of the world?

51
Questions to think about throughout 142...
  • How does the environment affect development?
  • How does maturation affect development?
  • Why did scientists underestimate how much infants
    know?
  • What is the competence/ performance distinction?
  • Can one part of the brain know something that
    another part of the brain does not know?

52
Questions to think about throughout 142...
  • What is the difference between studying natural
    competences and side-effects?
  • What does learning mean?
  • How many learning processes are there?
  • Is instinct the opposite of learning?
  • What is the design of the instinct that causes
    learning in a given domain?
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