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Peterson, Robin L.; Pennington, Bruce F.; Olson, Richard K. – Cognition, 2013
We investigated the phonological and surface subtypes of developmental dyslexia in light of competing predictions made by two computational models of single word reading, the Dual-Route Cascaded Model (DRC; Coltheart, Rastle, Perry, Langdon, & Ziegler, 2001) and Harm and Seidenberg's connectionist model (HS model; Harm & Seidenberg, 1999). The…
Descriptors: Dyslexia, Phonology, Prediction, Models
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Shafto, Patrick; Kemp, Charles; Mansinghka, Vikash; Tenenbaum, Joshua B. – Cognition, 2011
Most natural domains can be represented in multiple ways: we can categorize foods in terms of their nutritional content or social role, animals in terms of their taxonomic groupings or their ecological niches, and musical instruments in terms of their taxonomic categories or social uses. Previous approaches to modeling human categorization have…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Classification, Inferences, Simulation
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Goldwater, Micah B.; Markman, Arthur B.; Stilwell, C. Hunt – Cognition, 2011
Most theories of categorization posit feature-based representations. Markman and Stilwell (2001) argued that many natural categories name roles in relational systems and therefore they are role-governed categories. There is little extant empirical evidence to support the existence of role-governed categories. Three experiments examine predictions…
Descriptors: Classification, Experiments, Prediction, Theories
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Bukach, Cindy M.; Cottle, Jasmine; Ubiwa, JoAnna; Miller, Jessica – Cognition, 2012
Same-race (SR) faces are recognized better than other-race (OR) faces, and this other-race effect (ORE) is correlated with experience. SR faces are also processed more holistically than OR faces, suggesting one possible mechanism for poorer performance on OR faces. Studies of object expertise have shown that individuating experiences are necessary…
Descriptors: Expertise, Classification, Correlation, Whites
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Royzman, Edward B.; Goodwin, Geoffrey P.; Leeman, Robert F. – Cognition, 2011
According to a recently prominent account of moral judgment, genuine moral disapprobation is a product of two convergent vectors of normative influence: a strong negative affect that arises from the mere consideration of a given piece of human conduct and a (socially acquired) belief that this conduct is wrong (Nichols, 2002). The existing…
Descriptors: Evidence, Prediction, Behavior Standards, Value Judgment
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Maddox, W. Todd; Love, Bradley C.; Glass, Brian D.; Filoteo, J. Vincent – Cognition, 2008
Rule-based and information-integration category learning were compared under minimal and full feedback conditions. Rule-based category structures are those for which the optimal rule is verbalizable. Information-integration category structures are those for which the optimal rule is not verbalizable. With minimal feedback subjects are told whether…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Learning Theories, Prediction, Classification
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Pothos, Emmanuel M.; Close, James – Cognition, 2008
When participants are asked to spontaneously categorize a set of items, they typically produce unidimensional classifications, i.e., categorize the items on the basis of only one of their dimensions of variation. We examine whether it is possible to predict unidimensional vs. two-dimensional classification on the basis of the abstract stimulus…
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Psychology, Cognitive Processes, Prediction
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Opfer, John E.; Bulloch, Megan J. – Cognition, 2007
A number of recent models and experiments have suggested that evidence of early category-based induction is an artifact of perceptual cues provided by experimenters. We tested these accounts against the prediction that different relations (causal versus non-causal) determine the types of perceptual similarity by which children generalize. Young…
Descriptors: Novels, Logical Thinking, Cues, Young Children