» Articles » PMID: 1505250

Children's Awareness of the Biological Implications of Kinship

Overview
Journal Child Dev
Specialty Pediatrics
Date 1992 Aug 1
PMID 1505250
Citations 5
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Preschoolers' thinking about kinship was explored by means of a simple induction task. A target animal was described as possessing a property, and children were asked whether each of 2 other animals shares the property or not. When no information about kinship was given, children in Experiment 1 based their inductions of biological properties on physical similarity. However, when kinship relations were specified, children judged that dissimilar-looking kin share more biological properties than similar-looking but unrelated members of the same species. In Experiment 2, describing the similar animals as socially related did not change the basic pattern of inductions obtained in the first experiment. Moreover, subjects in Experiment 3 did not induce more acquired physical and psychological properties among families than among unrelated animals. The results of Experiments 1 and 2 illustrate one case where young children favor a nonperceptible relation (kinship) over a perceptible one (similarity) as a basis for judgment. The overall pattern of data suggest that young children distinguish to some extent between the biological and social domains.

Citing Articles

Darwin's tales-A content analysis of how evolution is presented in children's books.

Adler I, Fiedler D, Harms U PLoS One. 2022; 17(7):e0269197.

PMID: 35830379 PMC: 9278771. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0269197.


Between living and nonliving: Young children's animacy judgments and reasoning about humanoid robots.

Kim M, Yi S, Lee D PLoS One. 2019; 14(6):e0216869.

PMID: 31251743 PMC: 6599145. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0216869.


Sensing the coherence of biology in contrast to psychology: young children's use of causal relations to distinguish two foundational domains.

Erickson J, Keil F, Lockhart K Child Dev. 2010; 81(1):390-409.

PMID: 20331675 PMC: 3057883. DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-8624.2009.01402.x.


Differences in preschoolers' and adults' use of generics about novel animals and artifacts: a window onto a conceptual divide.

Brandone A, Gelman S Cognition. 2008; 110(1):1-22.

PMID: 19046742 PMC: 2648303. DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2008.08.005.


Properties of inductive reasoning.

Heit E Psychon Bull Rev. 2001; 7(4):569-92.

PMID: 11206199 DOI: 10.3758/bf03212996.