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May 1991
ISBN 0262631369
264 pp.
12 illus.
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Categorization and Naming in Childern
Ellen Markman

In this landmark work on early conceptual and lexical development, Ellen Markman explores the fascinating problem of how young children succeed at the task of inducing concepts. Backed by extensive experimental results, she challenges the fundamental assumptions of traditional theories of language acquisition and proposes that a set of constraints or principles of induction allows children to efficiently integrate knowledge and to induce information about new examples of familiar categories.

Table of Contents
 Series Foreword
 Acknowledgments
1 Introduction
2 Acquisition of Category Terms
3 The Internal Structure of Categories
4 Basic, Superordinate, and Subordinate Level Categories
5 Natural Kinds
6 Language and Richly Structured versus Arbitrary Categories
7 Systematization of Categories
8 Collections versus Classes: Indirect Evidence for the Mutual Exclusivity Assumption
9 Mutual Exclusivity
10 Summary and Conclusions
 References
 Index
 
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Related Topics
Linguistics, Language
Psychology, Cognitive Science


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