Memory for generic and quantified sentences in Spanish-speaking children and adults

Journal of Child Language
Susan A GelmanSarah-Jane Leslie

Abstract

Generic language ( Owls eat at night) expresses knowledge about categories and may represent a cognitively default mode of generalization. English-speaking children and adults more accurately recall generic than quantified sentences ( All owls eat at night) and tend to recall quantified sentences as generic. However, generics in English are shorter than quantified sentences, and may be better recalled for this reason. The present study provided a new test of the issue in Spanish, where generics are expressed with an additional linguistic element not found in certain quantified sentences ( Los búhos comen de noche 'Owls eat at night' [generic] vs. Muchos búhos comen de noche 'Many owls eat at night' [quantified]). Both preschoolers and adults recalled generics more accurately than quantified sentences, and quantified sentences were more often recalled as generic than the reverse. These findings provide strong additional evidence for generics as a cognitive default, in an understudied cultural context.

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Citations

Mar 23, 2017·The Behavioral and Brain Sciences·Lin Bian, Andrei Cimpian
Jul 26, 2017·Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America·Susan A Gelman, Steven O Roberts

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