People can infer unknown features of a stimulus by retrieving memories of similar examples. It is proposed that we can reason from chains of examples. For example, stimulus A may remind us of B, which reminds us of C. Information about C may then affect reasoning about A. A mathematical model for categori-zation (extended from the context model of Medin & Schaffer, 1978), using mul-tiple-step chains of reasoning and memory for examples, is presented. In five experiments, subjects memorized feature descriptions of fictional people, then made predictions from incomplete descriptions. Various predictions could be made using one-, two-, or three-step chains of reasoning. These experiments varied in terms of stimulus structure, complexity of...
ABSTRACT—Our understanding of short-term recognition memory can be enhanced by careful choice and co...
Prediction is arguably the most fundamental problem that peo-ple face. Having discovered that some o...
The mental representation of relation-based concepts is different from that of feature-based concept...
A number of recent studies have shown that minimally counterintuitive concepts are better recalled t...
Purposive behaviour requires the learning of appropriate knowledge about the environment. Cognitive ...
In this paper, we propose a novel usage for computational cognitive models. In cognitive science, co...
Deduction, induction and analogy are considered as slightly different manifestations of one and the ...
Many computational models of reasoning rely on explicit relation representations to account for huma...
The categorization of external stimuli lies at the heart of cognitive science. Existing models of p...
Exemplar, prototype, and connectionist models typically assume that events constitute the basic unit...
had criterial features and that category membership could be determined by logical rules for the com...
Two experiments were performed to study inductive reasoning as a set of thought processes that opera...
This research’s purpose was to contrast the representations resulting from learning of the same cate...
Categorization is a central activity of human cognition. When an individual is asked to cat-egorize ...
Four experiments investigated the conditions in which people use a prototypic event sequence to comp...
ABSTRACT—Our understanding of short-term recognition memory can be enhanced by careful choice and co...
Prediction is arguably the most fundamental problem that peo-ple face. Having discovered that some o...
The mental representation of relation-based concepts is different from that of feature-based concept...
A number of recent studies have shown that minimally counterintuitive concepts are better recalled t...
Purposive behaviour requires the learning of appropriate knowledge about the environment. Cognitive ...
In this paper, we propose a novel usage for computational cognitive models. In cognitive science, co...
Deduction, induction and analogy are considered as slightly different manifestations of one and the ...
Many computational models of reasoning rely on explicit relation representations to account for huma...
The categorization of external stimuli lies at the heart of cognitive science. Existing models of p...
Exemplar, prototype, and connectionist models typically assume that events constitute the basic unit...
had criterial features and that category membership could be determined by logical rules for the com...
Two experiments were performed to study inductive reasoning as a set of thought processes that opera...
This research’s purpose was to contrast the representations resulting from learning of the same cate...
Categorization is a central activity of human cognition. When an individual is asked to cat-egorize ...
Four experiments investigated the conditions in which people use a prototypic event sequence to comp...
ABSTRACT—Our understanding of short-term recognition memory can be enhanced by careful choice and co...
Prediction is arguably the most fundamental problem that peo-ple face. Having discovered that some o...
The mental representation of relation-based concepts is different from that of feature-based concept...