Title: 3 points for this lecture
13 points for this lecture
- 1. Knowledge influences perception.
- 2. Knowledge can influence perception because
learning speeds up access to LTM. - 3. Access to LTM is speeded up by development of
a virtual short term memory, called Long Term
Working Memory (LT-WM)
23 points for this lecture
- Knowledge influences perception.
- Knowledge can influence perception because
learning speeds up access to LTM. - Access to LTM is speeded up by development of a
virtual short term memory, called Long Term
Working Memory (LT-WM
31. Knowledge influences perception
- Biederman, Rabinowitz, Glass, Stacy (1974)
- Subjects better at identifying briefly-presented
objects that were expected in a context. - Its easier to see things you expect to see.
- All of us use expectancies in seeing the world.
- But what do we expect to see?
4What do we expect to see?
- Chase Simon (1972)
- Compared chess master, intermediate and novice
players. - Subjects viewed chessboard in midgame, then
reconstructed it from memory (0 delay). - Grandmaster saw and remembered more than the
other two.
5How did the GMs knowledge help him?
- The GM looked for patterns in the display.
- Two pieces classed as in the same chunk if set
down less than 2 seconds apart. - GM had more and larger chunks.
- Pieces put down in succession by GM shared more
relations (e.g., type, colour, defence).
6How do patterns help experts?
- Chi, Feltovich, Glaser (1981)
- Compared 1st yr. undergrads (novices) and senior
Ph.D. students in physics (experts). - Subjects grouped physics problems.
- Novices classified on basis of surface experts
used underlying structure (e.g., Newtons Second
Law), ignoring surface differences.
7Review
- We all use expectancies in ordinary perception.
Its easier to see things we expect to see
(Biederman). - Experts show a pronounced form of this effect
they develop precise expectations for their skill
domain. (Chase Simon) - Those expectations allow experts to recover the
underlying structure of their domain. (Chi et al.)
83 points for this lecture
- Knowledge influences perception.
- Knowledge can influence perception because
learning speeds up access to LTM. - Access to LTM is speeded up by development of a
virtual short term memory, called Long Term
Working Memory (LT-WM
9How can knowledge influence perception?
- Perception happens fast.
- How can we retrieve knowledge fast enough to
influence rapid perception? Two theories - Superior performance based on innate ability.
- Superior performance based on learning.
10Superior performance based on talent
- The first possibility is that experts are good
because of some trait, something they were born
with. - This view has three implications
- 1. People with basic training should be capable
of excellent performance because they have talent.
11Superior performance based on talent
- 3 implications of the talent hypothesis
- 2. Aptitude tests should be good predictors of
performance even after years of experience. - 3. Should be an upper limit to how good a
persons performance can be (specified by their
talent).
123 implications of the talent hypothesis
- All three claims are false.
- 1. With only basic training, no-one does well.
- 2. Aptitude tests are poor predictors of
performance after several years of experience. - 3. If there is an upper limit to performance, we
havent found it yet. (Consider Olympic athletes,
difficult violin pieces, of 100 years ago.)
13Superior performance based on learning
- Some examples of superior performance
- Blindfolded chess master, George Koltanowski
could play 30 opponents at once, winning most
games, drawing the others. (Koltanowski, 1985) - An expert waiter, J.C., rapidly takes orders
from up to 20 customers at one table. Never mixes
them up. Always delivers right meal to each
person. (Ericsson Polson, 1988).
14Superior performance based on learning
- How do these experts do this? In playing chess or
taking food orders, you need - Fast access to a memory store.
- Large capacity in that memory store.
- But humans have two stores one for fast access
(STM) and one for large capacity (LTM).
153 points for this lecture
- Knowledge influences perception.
- Knowledge can influence perception because
learning speeds up access to LTM. - Access to LTM is speeded up by development of a
virtual short term memory, called Long Term
Working Memory (LT-WM
16Virtual short-term memory
- Ericsson Kintsch (1995) argue that experts have
a virtual short-term memory. E K call it, Long
Term Working Memory (LT-WM). - Through experience, you set up a virtual STM
inside LTM a rapid access store without the
capacity limit. - Based on Chase Ericsson (1982).
17Chase Ericcson (1982)
- Used the digit-span task
- Subject hears a sequence of digits, like 7 4
9 5 1 3, and repeats them back. - Score number repeated back without error.
- Subject S.F., a long distance runner, had a digit
span of over 80 digits.
18How did S.F. do that?
- S.F. began with groups of four or five numbers,
which he coded as times for distances (e.g., 3
5 9 6 3 min. 59.6 seconds, for 1 mile
race). - He then grouped the groups into supergroups, then
grouped the supergroups, producing a hierarchical
network structure. - At the top of the hierarchy was a node. That
node went into STM.
19Top-level node
3 5 6 9 4 2 8 1 7 6 1 3 5 2 9 8 6 1 5
3 4 7 3 6 8 5 2 9 1 4 7 3 2
20How did S.F. do that?
- At the end of a long session of hearing, storing,
and recalling lists of digits, he could
accurately retrieve all of the lists. - C E could specify a location in the network for
a given list, and S.F. could tell them the digits
in that location in the network in his memory. - He must have been capable of very rapid storage
in a long-term store.
21Extending the model to expertise in general
- Ericsson Kintsch expanded Chase Ericssons
idea into a general model of expert behaviour - Network retrieval structures are rapidly created
and stored by experts. - With top-level node in STM, the whole structure
becomes rapidly available.
22Review
- Information is stored in LTM. Each item is
associated with a cue. - All cues are related in a hierarchical retrieval
structure, under a top-level node. - With top-level node in STM, any item under node
can be retrieved. - Fast access large capacity LT-WM