Concrete and abstract concepts in school age children


Autoria(s): Caramelli, Nicoletta; Setti, Annalisa; Maurizzi, Donatella D.
Data(s)

08/06/2016

08/06/2016

2004

27/12/2014

Resumo

The aim of this study is to highlight what kind of information distinguishes abstract and concrete conceptual knowledge in different aged children. A familiarity-rating task has shown that 8-year-olds judged concrete concepts as very familiar while abstract concepts were judged as much less familiar with ratings increasing substantially from age 10 to age 12, according to literature showing that abstract terms are not mastered until adolescence (Schwanenflugel, 1991). The types of relation elicited by abstract and concrete concepts during development were investigated in an association production task. At all considered age levels, concrete concepts mainly activated attributive and thematic relations as well as, to a much lesser extent, taxonomic relations and stereotypes. Abstract concepts, instead, elicited mainly thematic relations and, to a much lesser extent, examples and taxonomic relations. The patterns of relations elicited were already differentiated by age 8, becoming more specific in abstract concepts with age.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

Caramelli, N., Setti, A. and Maurizzi, D.D. (2004) 'Concrete and abstract concepts in school age children', Psychology of Language and Communication, 8(2), pp. 19-34.

8

2

19

34

1234-2238

http://hdl.handle.net/10468/2707

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

De Gruyter Open

Relação

http://www.plc.psychologia.pl/plc/plc/contents/vol_8-2.htm

http://www.degruyter.com/view/j/plc

Direitos

© 2004, the Authors.

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/

Palavras-Chave #Conceptual knowledge #Development
Tipo

Article (non peer-reviewed)