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Related Experiment Video

Updated: May 29, 2026

Experience is Instrumental in Tuning a Link Between Language and Cognition: Evidence from 6- to 7- Month-Old Infants' Object Categorization
05:35

Experience is Instrumental in Tuning a Link Between Language and Cognition: Evidence from 6- to 7- Month-Old Infants' Object Categorization

Published on: April 19, 2017

Acquiring generic knowledge without induction in infancy.

Rubeena Shamsudheen1, Mariem Diané1, Szilvia Takács1

  • 1Cognitive Development Center, Department of Cognitive Science, Central European University, Vienna, Austria.

Acta Psychologica
|May 27, 2026
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Infants learn generic knowledge from communicative demonstrations, not just by induction. This suggests young children can grasp general concepts nonverbally before language acquisition.

Keywords:
CommunicationGeneralizationGenericsInfantsLearning

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Examining Recall Memory in Infancy and Early Childhood Using the Elicited Imitation Paradigm

Published on: April 28, 2016

Area of Science:

  • Developmental Psychology
  • Cognitive Science
  • Linguistics

Background:

  • Children generalize information better from communicative demonstrations than non-communicative observation.
  • Two theories explain this: Boosted Induction (strengthening generalization) and Nonverbal Generics (direct nonverbal statements).
  • Disregarding negative evidence (counterexamples) is key to acquired generic knowledge.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To differentiate between the Boosted Induction and Nonverbal Generics accounts of early knowledge acquisition.
  • To investigate how infants respond to counterexamples after learning from communicative versus non-communicative sources.

Main Methods:

  • Two studies involving 18-month-old infants.
  • Infants acquired information about an object's property via either communicative demonstration or non-communicative observation.
  • Infants then encountered a counterexample before being tested on a novel object.

Main Results:

  • Infants learning via observation were deterred by the counterexample, ceasing further generalization.
  • Infants learning via communicative demonstration persisted in generalization attempts even after the counterexample.
  • This persistence supports the Nonverbal Generics account.

Conclusions:

  • Human infants can acquire generic knowledge directly through nonverbal communication, bypassing inductive processes.
  • This learning occurs even before infants develop full linguistic comprehension of generic statements.
  • Findings support the Nonverbal Generics model for early social learning and knowledge generalization.