2023
DOI: 10.31234/osf.io/squ7y
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An object’s categorizability impacts whether infants encode surface features into their object representations

Abstract: Infants encode the surface features of simple, unfamiliar objects (e.g., red triangle) and the categorical identities of familiar, categorizable objects (e.g., car) into their representations of these objects. We asked whether 17-month-olds ignore non-diagnostic surface features (e.g., color) in favor of encoding an object’s categorical identity (e.g., car) when objects are from familiar categories. In Experiment 1 (n=18), we hid a categorizable object inside an opaque box. In No Switch trials, infants retriev… Show more

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