Concepts and Categorisation Flashcards
how are the transition in paintings characterised ?
pre renaissance: representational
post renaissance: photorealistic
how is categorisation necessary for survival?
what are the two categories that we judge on?
- provides basis of deciding what constitutes appropriate action
- friendly v unfriendly… competent v incompetent they are
what are the benefits of categories?
- provides means for identification (eg, identification of the A letter in different fonts)
- reduces complexity of the environment (eg, simplifying colours)
- allows for generalisation - don’t have be taught novel objects (generalisation of which types of birds Dan would like)
what is induction in regards to categorisation?
generalising from the particular to the general… “given a set of examples, what is the general conclusion that one could draw?”
what are the 5 key empirical effects that help us understand generalisation?
- categorisation and generalisation
- typicality of instances
- typicality of generalisations
- category size
- category variability
how does a category induction task work?
shown a sentence eg all horses have tricket’s disease, you then have to identify if the generalisation of all mammals have trickets disease is accurate
how does the effect of typical premise work?
people are more likely to generalise from a prototypical example of the category than from a less prototypical example
eg, more likely to generalise from robin to birds than penguins to birds
what are the 3 main effects of typical conclusion?
- typical instances are more strongly related to the category and so allow for greater generalisation to the broader category
- generalisation is greater to more typical category members
- generalisation is greater to more specific categories (I.E. smaller categories)
- generalisation is greater when the examples are more variable (eg rhino and hippos instead of hippos and hamsters)
what is generalisation affected by?
- typicality of instances
- typicality of category
- typicality of category size
- category variability
how do we measure if infants can categorise?
habituation tests… show them stimuli where something (star) remains the same as a novel stimuli (lighting, sun, love heart) and track where they look to see what interests them, theory is that if they are interested, they are noticing if something is changing
what is the main difference between infants and adults ability to categorise?
flexibility of concepts eg, kids categories are focused on perceptual grouping whereas adults can create categories on abstract things like unobservable attribute (love, doubt), relational concepts (enemy/barrier) and rules (what makes an uncle, island etc.)
what is selective attention?
the factor which determines the influence or weight of a stimulus dimension or attribute on categorisation
how do we know selective attention is important?
categories which require you to pay attention to more dimensions are harder to learn
what does category learning difficulty depend on?
how many different dimensions are used to define the category
T or false, children are more likely to sort stimuli on the basis of a single individual dimension of those stimuli than adults?
False, adults are sort stimuli on the basis of a single individual dimension of the stimuli