Authors
Kosta Boskovic, David Barner
Published in
Developmental psychology. Jun 15, 2026. Epub Jun 15, 2026.
Abstract
Acquiring an adultlike understanding of age involves coordinating knowledge across several domains of abstract content (e.g., time, number, biology). In the present study, we explored children's early understanding of age and how it is informed by features including size, facial and bodily morphology, and numerical age. Across two preregistered experiments, we tested 215 three- to five-year-old children on their identification of which of two figures is older. Like previous studies, we found that children often confound age with size. However, we also found that this tendency was eliminated when children were provided with less extreme differences in size, they had access to information regarding numerical age, or when facial and bodily cues to age were more pronounced. We also found that, overall, children's age judgments were related to their mastery of number words, suggesting a role for numeracy in understanding age. These results suggest that young children possess a concept of age, which is differentiated from a concept of size and which draws on multiple converging cues for reasoning about age. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2026 APA, all rights reserved).
PMID:
42295225
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 15 Jun 2026.
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