Modified items All recently modified items, latest first. Words and arbitrary actions in early object categorization: weak evidence for a word advantage Both words and gestures have been shown to influence object categorization, often even overriding perceptual similarities to cue category membership. However, gestures are often meaningful to infants while words are arbitrarily related to an object they refer to, more similar to arbitrary actions that can be performed on objects. In this study, we examine how words and arbitrary actions shape category formation. Across 3 conditions (word cue, action cue, word-action cue), we presented infants (N = 90) with 8 videos of single-category objects which vary in color and other perceptual features. The objects were either accompanied by a word and/or an action that is being performed on the object. Infants in the word and action condition showed a decrease in looking over the course of the familiarization phase indicating habituation to the category, but infants in the word-action-condition did not. At test, infants saw a novel object of the just-learned category and a novel object from another category side-by-side on the screen. There was some evidence for an advantage for words in shaping early object categorization, although we note that this was not robust across analyses. Hartmann, Pauline External Doctoral Students External Doctoral Students Teaching Teaching Contact Biography and CV Hartmann, Pauline Aschoff, Sarah Mißmann, Franziska Mißmann, Franziska Pauline Hartmann Biography Aschoff, Sarah Woud, Marcella Blackwell, Simon Simon Blackwell Biography The role of systematicity in early referent selection. Clinical Psychology and Experimental Psychopathology The cognitive underpinnings and early development of children's selective trust Previous 20 items 1 ... 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 ... 76 Next 20 items