In making sense of the environment, we implicitly learn to associate stimulus attributes that frequently occur together. Is such learning favored for categories over individual items? Here, we introduce a novel paradigm for directly comparing category- to item-level learning. In a category-level experiment, even numbers (2,4,6,8) had a high-probability of appearing in blue, and odd numbers (3,5,7,9) in yellow. Associative learning was measured by the relative performance on trials with low-probability (p = .09) to high-probability (p = .91) number colors. There was strong evidence for associative learning: low-probability performance was impaired (40ms RT increase and 8.3% accuracy decrease relative to high-probability). This was not the ca...
Categorical perception (CP) of colour is demonstrated by faster or more accurate discrimination of c...
Categorical Perception (CP) is shown when stimuli that cross a category boundary are discriminated f...
Why do we draw the boundaries between “blue” and “green”, where we do? One proposed answer to this q...
peer reviewedIn making sense of the environment, we implicitly learn to associate stimulus attribute...
There is broad empirical evidence suggesting that higher-level cognitive processes, such as language...
Learning to categorize requires distinguishing category members from non-members by detecting the fe...
Learning to categorize requires distinguishing category members from non-members by detecting the fe...
Recent studies suggest that the widely accepted evidence in support of categorical perception of col...
Learning color words is a difficult problem for young chil-dren. Because color is abstract, this dif...
Categorical perception of color is shown when colors from the same category are discriminated less e...
Consideration is given to the tasks that make judgements of colour similarity based on perceptual si...
Real-world learning signals often come in the form of a continuous range of rewards or punishments, ...
International audienceIn the typical color-word contingency learning paradigm, participants respond ...
Two studies, an experimental category learning task and a computational simulation, examined how seq...
ABSTRACT—Recent work has shown that observers can parse streams of syllables, tones, or visual shape...
Categorical perception (CP) of colour is demonstrated by faster or more accurate discrimination of c...
Categorical Perception (CP) is shown when stimuli that cross a category boundary are discriminated f...
Why do we draw the boundaries between “blue” and “green”, where we do? One proposed answer to this q...
peer reviewedIn making sense of the environment, we implicitly learn to associate stimulus attribute...
There is broad empirical evidence suggesting that higher-level cognitive processes, such as language...
Learning to categorize requires distinguishing category members from non-members by detecting the fe...
Learning to categorize requires distinguishing category members from non-members by detecting the fe...
Recent studies suggest that the widely accepted evidence in support of categorical perception of col...
Learning color words is a difficult problem for young chil-dren. Because color is abstract, this dif...
Categorical perception of color is shown when colors from the same category are discriminated less e...
Consideration is given to the tasks that make judgements of colour similarity based on perceptual si...
Real-world learning signals often come in the form of a continuous range of rewards or punishments, ...
International audienceIn the typical color-word contingency learning paradigm, participants respond ...
Two studies, an experimental category learning task and a computational simulation, examined how seq...
ABSTRACT—Recent work has shown that observers can parse streams of syllables, tones, or visual shape...
Categorical perception (CP) of colour is demonstrated by faster or more accurate discrimination of c...
Categorical Perception (CP) is shown when stimuli that cross a category boundary are discriminated f...
Why do we draw the boundaries between “blue” and “green”, where we do? One proposed answer to this q...