When Less Is More: Fewer Shape Types Result In Higher Quality Parent-Child Shape Talk

Kassie Kerr, Sarah Eason, Michelle Hurst, Alana Dulaney-Foley, Amy Claessens, Susan C. Levine. When Less Is More: Fewer Shape Types Result In Higher Quality Parent-Child Shape Talk. In Chuck Kalish, Martina A. Rau, Xiaojin (Jerry) Zhu, Timothy T. Rogers, editors, Proceedings of the 40th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, CogSci 2018, Madison, WI, USA, July 25-28, 2018. cognitivesciencesociety.org, 2018. [doi]

@inproceedings{KerrEHDCL18,
  title = {When Less Is More: Fewer Shape Types Result In Higher Quality Parent-Child Shape Talk},
  author = {Kassie Kerr and Sarah Eason and Michelle Hurst and Alana Dulaney-Foley and Amy Claessens and Susan C. Levine},
  year = {2018},
  url = {https://mindmodeling.org/cogsci2018/papers/0621/index.html},
  researchr = {https://researchr.org/publication/KerrEHDCL18},
  cites = {0},
  citedby = {0},
  booktitle = {Proceedings of the 40th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, CogSci 2018, Madison, WI, USA, July 25-28, 2018},
  editor = {Chuck Kalish and Martina A. Rau and Xiaojin (Jerry) Zhu and Timothy T. Rogers},
  publisher = {cognitivesciencesociety.org},
  isbn = {978-0-9911967-8-4},
}