How cues to social categorization impact children's inferences about social categories
Date issued
September 2022
In
Acta Psychologica
Vol
229
From page
1
To page
12
Reviewed by peer
true
Abstract
Social categorization involves two crucial processes: First, children seek properties on which they can categorize individuals, i.e., they learn to form social categories; then children make inferences based on social category membership and might develop affective responses toward social categories. Over the last decade, a growing number of research in developmental psychology started to use novel social categories to investigate how children learn and reason about social categories. To date, three types of cues have been put forward as means to form social categories, namely linguistic, visual, and behavioral cues. Based on social category membership, children draw inferences about the shared properties of social category members and about how social category members ought to behave and interact with each other. With additional input, children might apply essentialist beliefs to social categories and develop affective responses toward social categories. This article aims to provide key insights on the development of stereotypes and intergroup biases by reviewing recent works that investigated how children learn to form novel social categories and the kind of inferences they make about these novel social categories.
Publication type
journal article
File(s)![Thumbnail Image]()
Loading...
Name
Mari2022_1-s2.0-S0001691822002220-main.pdf
Type
Main Article
Size
679.07 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
