“…On the other hand, language seems to follow a different path: words for superordinate categories are acquired comparatively late relative to words for basic-level categories (Murphy, 2016). Additionally, the developmental timecourse of taxonomic relatedness, compared to more associative and thematic forms of relatedness, is still debated and seems to vary according to the task (Gelman & Markman, 1986;Markman & Hutchinson, 1984;Sloutsky, Yim, Yao, & Dennis, 2017;Unger, Savic, & Sloutsky, 2020;Unger & Fisher, 2021). Our results suggest that information regarding taxonomic (including superordinate) categories can be readily extracted from a small subset of the linguistic input to one child (up to age 3), as found in other modeling work using broader aggregate data (Sloutsky et al, 2017).…”