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A Rational Constructivist Account of the Characteristic-to-Defining Shift
Abstract
A widely observed phenomenon in children’s word-extensionsand generalizations is the characteristic-to-defining shift,whereby young children initially generalize words based ontypical properties and gradually transition into generalizingwords using abstract, logical information. In this paper, wepropose a statistically principled model of conceptual devel-opment grounded in the trade-off between simplicity and fit tothe data. We run our model based on informant-provided fam-ily trees and the real-life characteristic features of people onthose trees. We demonstrate that the characteristic-to-definingshift does not necessarily depend on discrete change in rep-resentation or processes. Instead, the shift could fall out nat-urally from statistical inference over conceptual hypotheses.Our model finds that the shift occurs even when abstract logicalrelations are present from the outset of learning as long as char-acteristic features are informative but imperfect in their abilityto capture the underlying concept to be learned—a property ofour elicited features.
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