Why stereotypes don’t even make good defaults

Many concepts have stereotypes. This leaves open the question of whether concepts are stereotypes. It has been argued elsewhere that theories that identify concepts with their stereotypes or with stereotypical properties of their instances (e.g., Rosch, E. (1978). Principles of categorization. In E....

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Veröffentlicht in:Cognition 2007-04, Vol.103 (1), p.1-22
Hauptverfasser: Connolly, Andrew C., Fodor, Jerry A., Gleitman, Lila R., Gleitman, Henry
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container_title Cognition
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creator Connolly, Andrew C.
Fodor, Jerry A.
Gleitman, Lila R.
Gleitman, Henry
description Many concepts have stereotypes. This leaves open the question of whether concepts are stereotypes. It has been argued elsewhere that theories that identify concepts with their stereotypes or with stereotypical properties of their instances (e.g., Rosch, E. (1978). Principles of categorization. In E. Rosch & B. B. Lloyd (Ed.), Cognition and Categorization. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates; Smith, E. E., Medin, D. L. (1981). Categories and Concepts. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.) fail to provide an adequate account of the compositionality of concepts (Fodor, J., Lepore, E. (1996). The red herring and the pet fish: Why concepts still cannot be prototypes. Cognition, 58, 253–270.; Fodor, J. (1998). Concepts: Where cognitive science went wrong. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.). This paper extends this argument and reports an experiment suggesting that participants do not assume, even as a default strategy, that complex concepts inherit the stereotypes of their constituents. Thus propositions such as “Baby ducks have webbed feet” were judged to be less likely to be true than propositions like “Ducks have webbed feet.” Moreover, manipulation of the type and number of noun phrase modifiers revealed a systematic departure from the unmodified noun’s stereotype both with the addition of stereotypical modifiers (“Quacking ducks have webbed feet” versus “Ducks have webbed feet”) and with the addition of a second modifier (“Baby Peruvian ducks have webbed feet” versus “Baby ducks have webbed feet”). Thus, in the general case the stereotypical properties of a head noun are systematically discounted when that head noun combines with modifiers. This effect represents a general principle of conceptual combination that argues against the inheritance of stereotypical features of concepts as a default strategy. Instead, we advocate a model of conceptual combination where concepts remain inert under combination, supported by a separate machinery that introduces pragmatic and knowledge-dependent inferences.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.cognition.2006.02.005
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subjects Adult
Biological and medical sciences
Classification
Cognition
Cognition. Intelligence
Cognitive Processes
Cognitive Psychology
Compositionality
Concept Formation
Concepts
Conceptual combination
Conceptualization
Female
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Humans
Inferences
Judgment
Male
Mental imagery. Mental representation
Nouns
Prototypes
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychology. Psychophysiology
Social psychology
Stereotypes
Stereotyping
title Why stereotypes don’t even make good defaults
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