Dedre Gentner

Alice Gabrielle Twight Professor of Psychology & Education


Curriculum vitae



(847)467-1272


Department of Psychology

Northwestern University



Developmental changes in children's understanding of the similarity between photographs and their referents.


Journal article


D. Uttal, D. Gentner, Linda L. Liu, Alison R. Lewis
Developmental Science, 2008

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMed
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APA   Click to copy
Uttal, D., Gentner, D., Liu, L. L., & Lewis, A. R. (2008). Developmental changes in children's understanding of the similarity between photographs and their referents. Developmental Science.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Uttal, D., D. Gentner, Linda L. Liu, and Alison R. Lewis. “Developmental Changes in Children's Understanding of the Similarity between Photographs and Their Referents.” Developmental Science (2008).


MLA   Click to copy
Uttal, D., et al. “Developmental Changes in Children's Understanding of the Similarity between Photographs and Their Referents.” Developmental Science, 2008.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{d2008a,
  title = {Developmental changes in children's understanding of the similarity between photographs and their referents.},
  year = {2008},
  journal = {Developmental Science},
  author = {Uttal, D. and Gentner, D. and Liu, Linda L. and Lewis, Alison R.}
}

Abstract

In a series of three experiments, we investigated the development of children's understanding of the similarities between photographs and their referents. Based on prior work on the development of analogical understanding (e.g. Gentner & Rattermann, 1991), we suggest that the appreciation of this relation involves multiple levels. Photographs are similar to their referents both in terms of the constituent objects and in terms of the relations among these objects. We predicted that children would appreciate object similarity (whether photographs depict the same objects as in the referent scene) before they would appreciate relational similarity (whether photographs depict the objects in the same spatial positions as in the referent scene). To test this hypothesis, we presented 3-, 4-, 5-, 6-, and 7-year-old children and adults with several candidate photographs of an arrangement of objects. Participants were asked to choose which of the photographs was 'the same' as the arrangement. We manipulated the types of information the photographs preserved about the referent objects. One set of photographs did not preserve the object properties of the scene. Another set of photographs preserved the object properties of the scene, but not the relational similarity, such that the original objects were depicted but occupied different spatial positions in the arrangement. As predicted, younger children based their choices of the photographs largely on object similarity, whereas older children and adults also took relational similarity into account. Results are discussed in terms of the development of children's appreciation of different levels of similarity.


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