Gelman Susan A, Leslie Sarah-Jane, Was Alexandra M, Koch Christina M
University of Michigan.
Princeton University.
Lang Cogn Neurosci. 2015 May 1;30(4):448-461. doi: 10.1080/23273798.2014.931591.
Recently, several scholars have hypothesized that generics are a default mode of generalization, and thus that young children may at first treat quantifiers as if they were generic in meaning. To address this issue, the present experiment provides the first in-depth, controlled examination of the interpretation of generics compared to both general quantifiers ("all Xs", "some Xs") and specific quantifiers ("all of these Xs", "some of these Xs"). We provided children (3 and 5 years) and adults with explicit frequency information regarding properties of novel categories, to chart when "some", "all", and generics are deemed appropriate. The data reveal three main findings. First, even 3-year-olds distinguish generics from quantifiers. Second, when children make errors, they tend to be in the direction of treating quantifiers like generics. Third, children were more accurate when interpreting specific versus general quantifiers. We interpret these data as providing evidence for the position that generics are a default mode of generalization, especially when reasoning about kinds.
最近,几位学者提出假设,认为类指是一种默认的泛化模式,因此幼儿最初可能会将量词当作类指来理解。为解决这一问题,本实验首次对类指的解释进行了深入、可控的研究,并与一般量词(“所有X”、“一些X”)和特定量词(“这些X全部”、“这些X中的一些”)进行了比较。我们向儿童(3岁和5岁)及成人提供了关于新类别属性的明确频率信息,以确定何时“一些”、“所有”和类指被认为是合适的。数据揭示了三个主要发现。第一,即使是3岁的儿童也能区分类指和量词。第二,当儿童犯错时,他们倾向于将量词当作类指来处理。第三,儿童在解释特定量词和一般量词时更准确。我们将这些数据解释为支持以下观点的证据:类指是一种默认的泛化模式,尤其是在对种类进行推理时。