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Kalish, Charles W.; Rogers, Timothy T.; Lang, Jonathan; Zhu, Xiaojin – Cognition, 2011
Three experiments with 88 college-aged participants explored how unlabeled experiences--learning episodes in which people encounter objects without information about their category membership--influence beliefs about category structure. Participants performed a simple one-dimensional categorization task in a brief supervised learning phase, then…
Descriptors: Supervision, Statistical Distributions, Classification, Beliefs
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Vlach, Haley A.; Sandhofer, Catherine M.; Kornell, Nate – Cognition, 2008
The spacing effect describes the robust phenomenon whereby memory is enhanced when learning events are distributed, instead of being presented in succession. We investigated the effect of spacing on children's memory and category induction. Three-year-old children were presented with two tasks, a memory task and a category induction task. In the…
Descriptors: Multiple Choice Tests, Preschool Children, Memory, Logical Thinking
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Hoover, Merrit A.; Richardson, Daniel C. – Cognition, 2008
People will often look to empty, uninformative locations in the world when trying to recall spoken information. This spatial indexing behaviour occurs when the information had previously been associated with those locations. It remains unclear, however, whether this behaviour is an example of a simple association across perceptual and cognitive…
Descriptors: Memory, Cues, Classification, Animation
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Singh, Leher – Cognition, 2008
Although infants begin to encode and track novel words in fluent speech by 7.5 months, their ability to recognize words is somewhat limited at this stage. In particular, when the surface form of a word is altered, by changing the gender or affective prosody of the speaker, infants begin to falter at spoken word recognition. Given that natural…
Descriptors: Infants, Word Recognition, Child Development, Speech Communication
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Wilburn, Catherine; Feeney, Aidan – Cognition, 2008
In a recently published study, Sloutsky and Fisher [Sloutsky, V. M., & Fisher, A.V. (2004a). When development and learning decrease memory: Evidence against category-based induction in children. "Psychological Science", 15, 553-558; Sloutsky, V. M., & Fisher, A. V. (2004b). Induction and categorization in young children: A similarity-based model.…
Descriptors: Recognition (Psychology), Logical Thinking, Classification, Experimental Psychology
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Yamazaki, Y.; Aust, U.; Huber, L.; Hausmann, M.; Gunturkun, O. – Cognition, 2007
This study was aimed at revealing which cognitive processes are lateralized in visual categorizations of "humans" by pigeons. To this end, pigeons were trained to categorize pictures of humans and then tested binocularly or monocularly (left or right eye) on the learned categorization and for transfer to novel exemplars (Experiment 1). Subsequent…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Classification, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Memory
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Lewis, Michael B. – Cognition, 1999
Considers predictions derived from an instance-based model of effects of age of acquisition on face categorization. Describes test of predictions, which found that speed of college students' categorization of 185 faces from two television programs was influenced by frequency of occurrence on the show, time the characters were in the show, and time…
Descriptors: Classification, College Students, Individual Development, Memory
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Papafragou, Anna; Massey, Christine; Gleitman, Lila – Cognition, 2002
Two studies investigated whether language-specific patterns encoding manner and direction of motion in English and Greek affect adult and child speakers' performance on nonlinguistic motion tasks and linguistic descriptions of these motion events. Although the two linguistic groups differed in linguistic preferences, nonlinguistic task performance…
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Development, Comparative Analysis, Contrastive Linguistics