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  1. The foundations of object permanence: Does perceived cohesion determine infants’ appreciation of the continuous existence of material objects?Trix Cacchione - 2013 - Cognition 128 (3):397-406.
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  • Action experience alters 3-month-old infants' perception of others' actions.Jessica A. Sommerville, Amanda L. Woodward & Amy Needham - 2005 - Cognition 96 (1):B1-B11.
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  • Visual indexes, preconceptual objects, and situated vision.Zenon W. Pylyshyn - 2001 - Cognition 80 (1-2):127-158.
    This paper argues that a theory of situated vision, suited for the dual purposes of object recognition and the control of action, will have to provide something more than a system that constructs a conceptual representation from visual stimuli: it will also need to provide a special kind of direct (preconceptual, unmediated) connection between elements of a visual representation and certain elements in the world. Like natural language demonstratives (such as `this' or `that') this direct connection allows entities to be (...)
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  • Perception, Representation and the World: The FINST that binds.Zenon Pylyshyn - unknown
    I recently discovered that work I was doing in the laboratory and in theoretical writings was implicitly taking a position on a set of questions that philosophers had been worrying about for much of the past 30 or more years. My clandestine involvement in philosophical issues began when a computer science colleague and I were trying to build a model of geometrical reasoning that would draw a diagram and notice things in the diagram as it drew it (Pylyshyn, Elcock, Marmor, (...)
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  • Core systems of number.Stanislas Dehaene, Elizabeth Spelke & Lisa Feigenson - 2004 - Trends in Cognitive Sciences 8 (7):307-314.
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  • Visual indexes and nonconceptual reference.Zenon W. Pylyshyn - manuscript
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  • Free-ranging rhesus monkeys spontaneously individuate and enumerate small numbers of non-solid portions.Justin N. Wood, Marc D. Hauser, David D. Glynn & David Barner - 2008 - Cognition 106 (1):207-221.
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  • Split identity: Intransitive judgments of the identity of objects.Lance J. Rips - 2011 - Cognition 119 (3):356-373.
    Identity is a transitive relation, according to all standard accounts. Necessarily, if x = y and y = z, then x = z. However, people sometimes say that two objects, x and z, are the same as a third, y, even when x and z have different properties (thus, x = y and y = z, but x ≠ z). In the present experiments, participants read stories about an iceberg that breaks into two icebergs, one to the east and the (...)
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  • Objects are individuals but stuff doesn't count: perceived rigidity and cohesiveness influence infants' representations of small groups of discrete entities.Gavin Huntley-Fenner, Susan Carey & Andrea Solimando - 2002 - Cognition 85 (3):203-221.
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  • Enumeration of collective entities by 5-month-old infants.Paul Bloom - 2002 - Cognition 83 (3):55-62.
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  • Five-month-old infants have expectations for the accumulation of nonsolid substances.Erin M. Anderson, Susan J. Hespos & Lance J. Rips - 2018 - Cognition 175 (C):1-10.
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  • Eleven-month-old infants infer differences in the hardness of object surfaces from observation of penetration events.Tomoko Imura, Tomohiro Masuda, Nobu Shirai & Yuji Wada - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6:145379.
    Previous studies have shown different developmental trajectories for object recognition of solid and non-solid objects. However, there is no evidence as to whether infants have expectations regarding certain attributes of objects, such as surface hardness, in the absence of tactile information. In the present study, we examined infants’ perception of the hardness of object surfaces from visually presented penetration events using the familiarization–novelty preference procedure. Experiment 1 showed that by 11 months old infants distinguished a relatively soft surface from a (...)
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  • From the Lexicon to Expectations About Kinds: A Role for Associative Learning.Eliana Colunga & Linda B. Smith - 2005 - Psychological Review 112 (2):347-382.
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  • Substances as a core domain.Susan J. Hespos & Lance J. Rips - 2024 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 47:e131.
    Central to What Babies Know (Spelke, 2022) is the thesis that infants' understanding is divided into independent modules of core knowledge. As a test case, we consider adding a new domain: core knowledge of substances. Experiments show that infants' understanding of substances meets some criteria of core knowledge, and they raise questions about the relations that hold between core domains.
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  • Connecting numbers to discrete quantification: A step in the child’s construction of integer concepts.Emily Slusser, Annie Ditta & Barbara Sarnecka - 2013 - Cognition 129 (1):31-41.
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  • Young infants' expectations about a self-propelled agent's body.Youjung Choi, Jin Seok & Yuyan Luo - 2023 - Cognition 241 (C):105629.
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