The native language of social cognition

Harvard University · Université Paris Cité · +3 more institutions

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

What leads humans to divide the social world into groups, preferring their own group and disfavoring others? Experiments with infants and young children suggest these tendencies are based on predispositions that emerge early in life and depend, in part, on natural language. Young infants prefer to look at a person who previously spoke their native language. Older infants preferentially accept toys from native-language speakers, and preschool children preferentially select native-language speakers as friends. Variations in accent are sufficient to evoke these social preferences, which are observed in infants before they produce or comprehend speech and are exhibited by children even when they comprehend the…

Citation impact

912
total citations
FWCI
15.95
Percentile
100%
References
18
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Psychology
  • Stress (linguistics)
  • First language
  • Cognition
  • Social cognition
  • Linguistics
  • Foreign language
  • Developmental psychology
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Quality Education
No related works found for this paper.