Published July 28, 2023
| Version v1
Journal article
Open
Children's Early Spontaneous Comparisons Predict Later Analogical Reasoning Skills: An Investigation of Parental Influence
- 1. University College London
- 2. Northwestern University
- 3. University of California, Irvine
- 4. University of Chicago
Description
Laboratory studies have demonstrated beneficial effects of making comparisons on children's analogical reasoning skills. We extend this finding to an observational dataset comprising 42 children. The prevalence of specific comparisons, which identify a feature of similarity or difference, in children's spontaneous speech from 14–58 months is associated with higher scores in tests of verbal and non-verbal analogy in 6th grade. We test two pre-registered hypotheses about how parents influence children's production of specific comparisons: 1) via modelling, where parents produce specific comparisons during the sessions prior to child onset of this behaviour; 2) via responsiveness, where parents respond to their children's earliest specific comparisons in variably engaged ways. We do not find that parent modelling or responsiveness predicts children's production of specific comparisons. However, one of our pre-registered control analyses suggests that parents' global comparisons—comparisons that do not identify a specific feature of similarity or difference—may bootstrap children's later production of specific comparisons, controlling for parent IQ. We present exploratory analyses following up on this finding and suggest avenues for future confirmatory research. The results illuminate a potential route by which parents' behaviour may influence children's early spontaneous comparisons and potentially their later analogical reasoning skills.
Data availability
The de-identified data that support the findings reported under Aim 2 and Aim 3 of this study are openly available at https://github.com/silveycat/comparisons. Data that support the findings reported under Aim 1 cannot be made openly available, since these data by their nature could not be de-identified and participants did not consent for their data to be publicly shared.Files
Childrens-Early-Spontaneous-Comparisons-Predict-Later-Analogical-Reasoning-Skills.pdf
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Additional details
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1162/opmi_a_00093
- Other
- oai:uchicago.tind.io:7723
Funding
- NICHD
- P01-HD40605
- Hymen Milgrom Supporting Organization
- Successful Pathways from School to Work Initiative
- Northwestern University
- Spatial Intelligence and Learning Center
- British Academy
- Postdoctoral Fellowship