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Accepted manuscript

“Core Perception”: Re-imagining Precocious Reasoning as Sophisticated Perceiving

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 October 2025

Dawei Bai*
Affiliation:
École Normale Supérieure, Département d’Études Cognitives, PSL Research University, Institut Jean Nicod (ENS, EHESS, CNRS), Paris, France Yale University, Department of Psychology, New Haven, CT 06520-8047, USA
Alon Hafri
Affiliation:
Department of Linguistics & Cognitive Science, University of Delaware, Newark, DE 19716, USA
Véronique Izard
Affiliation:
Université Paris Cité, CNRS, Integrative Neuroscience and Cognition Center, F-75006 Paris, France
Chaz Firestone
Affiliation:
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD 21218, USA
Brent Strickland
Affiliation:
École Normale Supérieure, Département d’Études Cognitives, PSL Research University, Institut Jean Nicod (ENS, EHESS, CNRS), Paris, France Africa Business School and The School of Collective Intelligence. UM6P, Rabat, Morocco
*
*Corresponding authors: E-mail: brent.strickland@ens.fr

Abstract

“Core knowledge” refers to a set of cognitive systems that underwrite early representations of the physical and social world, appear universally across cultures, and likely result from our genetic endowment. Although this framework is canonically considered as a hypothesis about early-emerging conception — how we think and reason about the world — here we present an alternative view: that many such representations are inherently perceptual in nature. This “core perception” view explains an intriguing (and otherwise mysterious) aspect of core-knowledge processes and representations: that they also operate in adults, where they display key empirical signatures of perceptual processing. We first illustrate this overlap using recent work on “core physics”, the domain of core knowledge concerned with physical objects, representing properties such as persistence through time, cohesion, solidity, and causal interactions. We review evidence that adult vision incorporates exactly these representations of core physics, while also displaying empirical signatures of genuinely perceptual mechanisms, such as rapid and automatic operation on the basis of specific sensory inputs, informational encapsulation, and interaction with other perceptual processes. We further argue that the same pattern holds for other areas of core knowledge, including geometrical, numerical, and social domains. In light of this evidence, we conclude that many infant results appealing to precocious reasoning abilities are better explained by sophisticated perceptual mechanisms shared by infants and adults. Our core-perception view elevates the status of perception in accounting for the origins of conceptual knowledge, and generates a range of ready-to-test hypotheses in developmental psychology, vision science, and more.

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Target Article
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2025. Published by Cambridge University Press

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