La Trobe

The development of the size-weight illusion in children coincides with the development of nonverbal cognition rather than motor skills

journal contribution
posted on 2025-01-06, 02:32 authored by Philippe ChouinardPhilippe Chouinard, Kezia G Matheson, Kayla RoyalsKayla Royals, Oriane Landry, Gavin Buckingham, Elizabeth Saccone, Darren HockingDarren Hocking
We examined how the strength of the size–weight illusion develops with age in typically developing children. To this end, we recruited children aged 5–12 years and quantified the degree to which they experienced the illusion. We hypothesized that the strength of the illusion would increase with age. The results supported this hypothesis. We also measured abilities in manual dexterity, receptive language, and abstract reasoning to determine whether changes in illusion strength were associated with these factors. Manual dexterity and receptive language did not correlate with illusion strength. Conversely, illusion strength and abstract reasoning were tightly coupled with each other. Multiple regression further revealed that age, manual dexterity, and receptive language did not contribute more to the variance in illusion strength beyond children's abilities in abstract reasoning. Taken together, the effects of age on the size–weight illusion appear to be explained by the development of nonverbal cognition. These findings not only inform the literature on child development but also have implications for theoretical explanations on the size–weight illusion. We suggest that the illusion has a strong acquired component to it and that it is strengthened by children's reasoning skills and perhaps an understanding of the world that develops with age.

Funding

This study was funded by a La Trobe University Building Healthy Communities Research Focus Area award to P.A.C., a Discovery Project grant to P.A.C. from the Australian Research Council (DP170103189), and a Discovery Early Career Researcher Award to D.R.H. from the Australian Research Council (DE160100042).

History

Publication Date

2019-08-01

Journal

Journal of Experimental Child Psychology

Volume

184

Pagination

17p. (p. 48-64)

Publisher

Elsevier

ISSN

0022-0965

Rights Statement

© 2019 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).