CogSci 2025

July 31, 2025

San Francisco, United States

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keywords:

cognitive development

language and thought

concepts and categories

cross-cultural analysis

social cognition

culture

learning

psychology

memory

What determines which stories (or parts of stories) about the social world are captured and conveyed by children? How do they transform with retelling? We use an iterated learning paradigm to explore how peer-to-peer transmission of explanatory stories (here, explanations for the social customs of novel social groups) is influenced by explanatory framework (natural, supernatural, or hybrid) and children's existing belief systems. Our participants were 69 Hindu and Muslim 3rd-7th-graders in Gujarat, India. Consistent with the `minimally counterintuitive' nature of many highly culturally preserved concepts, hybrid explanations (containing both natural and supernatural elements) were transmitted with the greatest fidelity across chains. Individual religiosity also affected transmission: children who reported themselves as more religious transmitted scientific explanations less faithfully (and hybrid explanations more faithfully) than less religious children.

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Next from CogSci 2025

Characterizing Human Planning on Large, Real-World Conceptual Networks
technical paper

Characterizing Human Planning on Large, Real-World Conceptual Networks

CogSci 2025

Denis Lan and 1 other author

31 July 2025

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