An unusual asymmetry has been observed in natural category formation in infants (Quinn, Eimas, and Rosenkrantz, 1993). Infants who are in itially e xposed to a series of pictures of cats and then are shown a dog and a novel cat, show significantly more interest in the dog than in the cat. However, when the order of presentation is reversed — dogs are seen first, then a cat and a novel dog — the cat attracts no more attention than the dog. We show that a simple connectionist network can model this unexpected learning asymmetry and propose that this asymmetry arises naturally from the asymmetric overlaps of the feature distributions of...
Asymmetric Categorization in the Sequential Auditory Domain An unusual visual category learning asy...
A key question in categorisation is how infants extract regularities from the exemplars they encount...
Two experiments utilizing familiarization-novelty preference procedures examined the way stimulus ch...
The goal of this paper is to replicate and extend the connectionist model presented by Mareschal and...
An unusual asymmetry has been observed in natural category formation in infa...
Three- to 4-month-old infants show asymmetric exclusivity in the acquisition of cat and dog perceptu...
Young infants show unexplained asymmetries in the exclusivity of categories formed on the basis of v...
We present a neural network model that accounts for an observed asymmetry in the categorization of c...
An unusual category learning asymmetry in infants was observed by Quinn et al. (1993). Infants who w...
We examined the effect of 4-month-old infants previous experience with dogs and/or cats and their on...
Disentangling bottom-up and top-down processing in adult category learning is notoriously difficult....
Mareschal, French, and Quinn (2000) and Mareschal, Quinn, and French (2002)have proposed a connectio...
International audienceMareschal, French, and Quinn (2000) and Mareschal, Quinn, and French (2002) ha...
This article presents a connectionist model of correlation-based categorization by 10-month-old infa...
Although there is a wealth of knowledge on categorization early in life, there are still many unansw...
Asymmetric Categorization in the Sequential Auditory Domain An unusual visual category learning asy...
A key question in categorisation is how infants extract regularities from the exemplars they encount...
Two experiments utilizing familiarization-novelty preference procedures examined the way stimulus ch...
The goal of this paper is to replicate and extend the connectionist model presented by Mareschal and...
An unusual asymmetry has been observed in natural category formation in infa...
Three- to 4-month-old infants show asymmetric exclusivity in the acquisition of cat and dog perceptu...
Young infants show unexplained asymmetries in the exclusivity of categories formed on the basis of v...
We present a neural network model that accounts for an observed asymmetry in the categorization of c...
An unusual category learning asymmetry in infants was observed by Quinn et al. (1993). Infants who w...
We examined the effect of 4-month-old infants previous experience with dogs and/or cats and their on...
Disentangling bottom-up and top-down processing in adult category learning is notoriously difficult....
Mareschal, French, and Quinn (2000) and Mareschal, Quinn, and French (2002)have proposed a connectio...
International audienceMareschal, French, and Quinn (2000) and Mareschal, Quinn, and French (2002) ha...
This article presents a connectionist model of correlation-based categorization by 10-month-old infa...
Although there is a wealth of knowledge on categorization early in life, there are still many unansw...
Asymmetric Categorization in the Sequential Auditory Domain An unusual visual category learning asy...
A key question in categorisation is how infants extract regularities from the exemplars they encount...
Two experiments utilizing familiarization-novelty preference procedures examined the way stimulus ch...