Semantic memory tasks can focus on intensions (features and properties) or extensions (reference and categorization). The two aspects, intension and extension, should in principle be closely related. It is in virtue of possessing the intensional properties of a concept that an individual entity will be included in the extension of that concept. For example, any feathered creature that hatches from eggs and has two legs and a beak will be a bird, and any creature lacking any of these features will be something else. There is evidence for stable individual differences in each of these tasks, but these differences do not correspond across tasks. Two further studies show that, under certain conditions, the correspondence can be demonstrated. Th...
International audienceA differential approach of concepts formation considers that concepts can deri...
Thematically related concepts like coffee and milk are judged to be more similar than thematically u...
Categories that have a strong family-resemblance structure should be learned more easily than catego...
Concepts are represented in the mind through knowledge of their extensions (the class of items to wh...
Semantic memory tasks can focus on intensions (features and properties) or extensions (reference and...
The present study investigated the relationship between category extension and intension for eleven ...
As Murphy (2002) said, “concepts are the glue that hold our mental world together” (p. 1). People c...
Many cognitive psychological, computational, and neuropsychological approaches to the organisation o...
The study of mental representations of concepts has historically focused on the representations of t...
Similarity‐based theories of concepts have a broad intuitive appeal and have been successful in acco...
Current feature-based semantic memory models assume that the semantic representations of concepts di...
Abstract-concept learning, including same/different and matching-to-sample concept learning, provide...
Concepts can be interrelated by their similarities according to a taxonomic kind (e.g., animal, furn...
Consider two individuals, John and Mary, who each possess a number of concepts. How can we determine...
The present study investigated the relationship between category extension and intension for 11 diff...
International audienceA differential approach of concepts formation considers that concepts can deri...
Thematically related concepts like coffee and milk are judged to be more similar than thematically u...
Categories that have a strong family-resemblance structure should be learned more easily than catego...
Concepts are represented in the mind through knowledge of their extensions (the class of items to wh...
Semantic memory tasks can focus on intensions (features and properties) or extensions (reference and...
The present study investigated the relationship between category extension and intension for eleven ...
As Murphy (2002) said, “concepts are the glue that hold our mental world together” (p. 1). People c...
Many cognitive psychological, computational, and neuropsychological approaches to the organisation o...
The study of mental representations of concepts has historically focused on the representations of t...
Similarity‐based theories of concepts have a broad intuitive appeal and have been successful in acco...
Current feature-based semantic memory models assume that the semantic representations of concepts di...
Abstract-concept learning, including same/different and matching-to-sample concept learning, provide...
Concepts can be interrelated by their similarities according to a taxonomic kind (e.g., animal, furn...
Consider two individuals, John and Mary, who each possess a number of concepts. How can we determine...
The present study investigated the relationship between category extension and intension for 11 diff...
International audienceA differential approach of concepts formation considers that concepts can deri...
Thematically related concepts like coffee and milk are judged to be more similar than thematically u...
Categories that have a strong family-resemblance structure should be learned more easily than catego...