Abstract: Rules and similarity refer to qualitatively different processes. The classification of a stimulus by rules involves abstract and usually domain-specific knowledge operating primarily on the target representation. In contrast, similarity is a relation between the target representation and another representation of the same type. It is also useful to distinguish associationist processes as a third type of cognitive process
The question of What makes things seem similar? is important both because of similarity's pivotal ro...
In the first chapters, the prevalent conception of the nature of similarity is shown to be too narro...
Classification of entities into categories can be determined based on a rule - a single criterion or...
Abstract: Rules and similarity refer to qualitatively different processes. The classification of a s...
The key weakness of the proposed distinction between rules and similarity is that it effectively con...
Evidence from aphasia is considered that leads to a distinction between abstract and concrete though...
The distinction between rule-based and similarity-based processes in cognition is of fundamental imp...
The distinction between rule-based and similarity-based processes in cognition is of fundamental imp...
Similarity-based and rule-based accounts of cognition are often portrayed as opposing accounts. In ...
Unless restricted to explicitly held, sharable beliefs that control and justify a person’s behavior,...
A central controversy in cognitive science concerns the roles of rules versus similarity. To gain so...
Psychological studies of categorization often assume that all concepts are of the same general kind,...
For psychologists, the problem of induction has to do with distinguishing between generalizations pe...
Similarity is a fundamental concept within Cognitive Science. It is routinely invoked in the explana...
Similarity underlies fundamental cognitive capabilities such as memory, categorization, decision mak...
The question of What makes things seem similar? is important both because of similarity's pivotal ro...
In the first chapters, the prevalent conception of the nature of similarity is shown to be too narro...
Classification of entities into categories can be determined based on a rule - a single criterion or...
Abstract: Rules and similarity refer to qualitatively different processes. The classification of a s...
The key weakness of the proposed distinction between rules and similarity is that it effectively con...
Evidence from aphasia is considered that leads to a distinction between abstract and concrete though...
The distinction between rule-based and similarity-based processes in cognition is of fundamental imp...
The distinction between rule-based and similarity-based processes in cognition is of fundamental imp...
Similarity-based and rule-based accounts of cognition are often portrayed as opposing accounts. In ...
Unless restricted to explicitly held, sharable beliefs that control and justify a person’s behavior,...
A central controversy in cognitive science concerns the roles of rules versus similarity. To gain so...
Psychological studies of categorization often assume that all concepts are of the same general kind,...
For psychologists, the problem of induction has to do with distinguishing between generalizations pe...
Similarity is a fundamental concept within Cognitive Science. It is routinely invoked in the explana...
Similarity underlies fundamental cognitive capabilities such as memory, categorization, decision mak...
The question of What makes things seem similar? is important both because of similarity's pivotal ro...
In the first chapters, the prevalent conception of the nature of similarity is shown to be too narro...
Classification of entities into categories can be determined based on a rule - a single criterion or...