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Early emerging system for reasoning about the social nature of food.The Relative Importance of Language in Guiding Social Preferences Through DevelopmentColloquium paper: gene-culture coevolution in the age of genomicsCan you see what I am talking about? Human speech triggers referential expectation in four-month-old infants.The effects of indexical and phonetic variation on vowel perception in typically developing 9- to 12-year-old childrenPreverbal infants expect members of social groups to act alike.Infants Prefer Tunes Previously Introduced by Speakers of Their Native Language.Selective social learning of plant edibility in 6- and 18-month-old infants.The development of infant detection of inauthentic emotion.Eww she sneezed! Contamination context affects children's food preferences and consumption.Infants' and young children's imitation of linguistic in-group and out-group informants.I'll have what she's having: the impact of model characteristics on children's food choicesIncorporating dispositional traits into the treatment of anorexia nervosaThe origins of options.The role of external sources of information in children's evaluative food categories"Native" Objects and Collaborators: Infants' Object Choices and Acts of Giving Reflect Favor for Native Over Foreign SpeakersLanguage-based social preferences among children in South AfricaTrust and doubt: An examination of children's decision to believe what they are told about food.3-Year-Old Children Selectively Generalize Object Functions Following a Demonstration from a Linguistic In-group Member: Evidence from the Phenomenon of Scale ErrorInfants' Selectively Pay Attention to the Information They Receive from a Native Speaker of Their Language.Infants' preferences for native speakers are associated with an expectation of information.The Love of Large Numbers: A Popularity Bias in Consumer Choice.The Origins of Social Categorization.Mapping the Cultural Learnability Landscape of Danger.Naming influences 9-month-olds' identification of discrete categories along a perceptual continuum.Infants' inferences about language are social.Cultural group selection plays an essential role in explaining human cooperation: A sketch of the evidence.The early social significance of shared ritual actions.Observed infant food cue responsivity: Associations with maternal report of infant eating behavior, breastfeeding, and infant weight gain.Implicit attitudes, eating behavior, and the development of obesity.Learning the Structure of Social Influence.Infants possess an abstract expectation of ingroup support.Monolingual and bilingual children's social preferences for monolingual and bilingual speakers.Preverbal Infants Infer Third-Party Social Relationships Based on Language.Testing Theories about Ethnic Markers: Ingroup Accent Facilitates Coordination, Not Cooperation.Friends or foes: infants use shared evaluations to infer others' social relationships.
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P2860
description
article científic
@ca
article scientifique
@fr
articolo scientifico
@it
artigo científico
@pt
bilimsel makale
@tr
scientific article published on January 2009
@en
vedecký článok
@sk
vetenskaplig artikel
@sv
videnskabelig artikel
@da
vědecký článek
@cs
name
Social information guides infants' selection of foods.
@en
Social information guides infants' selection of foods.
@nl
type
label
Social information guides infants' selection of foods.
@en
Social information guides infants' selection of foods.
@nl
prefLabel
Social information guides infants' selection of foods.
@en
Social information guides infants' selection of foods.
@nl
P2093
P2860
P1476
Social information guides infants' selection of foods.
@en
P2093
Caitlin B McKee
Katherine D Kinzler
Kristin Shutts
P2860
P356
10.1080/15248370902966636
P577
2009-01-01T00:00:00Z