Title: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts
1Ch. 8 Categories and concepts
2Concept and Knowledge
- Topic
- How do we store and manipulate a concept in the
brain?
3Concepts, beliefs and behavior
4Concept/belief and action
- Mother Teresa
- Timothy McVeigh (Oklahoma bomber)
- Ted Kaczynski (the unabomber)
- Osama bin Laden
- Mahatma Gandhi
- Nelson Mandela
- George Washington
- 74 men and women died in Waco, TX
- Bill Clinton
5Psychiatric disorders
- Anxiety disorder
- Is created by an lingering belief on something
threatening happens - Maniac depression
- Disbelief on ones ability, fate, etc.
6Political language
- Compassionate conservative
- support the rich but also, supposedly, generous
to the poor. - Limousine liberal
- extremely rich but appreciate liberal ideas.
- War president
- A president who deals with war.
- Death tax
- Inheritance tax
- Pro-life
- a political position against abortion
- Pro-choice
- a political position that supports abortion
- Insurance premium
- Insurance fee
- Tax cuts
- cutting taxes of one group and raising taxes for
others
7Stereotype
8Concept and memory?
- Are they two different things?
9What is the structure of concept?
This is the todays topic.
10Demonstration
- Tell me what you see as accurately as possible.
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13Why do you say hammer?
- Why not hand tool?
- Or why not the 15 hammer I bought in Wal Mart
last Wednesday? - Why not animal?
- Or why not vegetable?
14What is concept?
- I dont know
- But maybe concept we have is related to the way
we categorize things
15Concept --gt categories
- In order to study concept, Ill talk about
categories .
16There are trillions of categories.
- Animals, dogs, cats, birds, mammals, furniture,
desks, chairs, tables, books, magazines.. - Trees, grass, weed, stones, rocks, sand,
mountains, rivers,.. - Games, sports, hobbies,
- school, banks, shops, restaurants, supermarkets,
17- Nazi!! Fascists!! Terrorists, racists, sexists,
pacifists, philanthropists, sophists,
aristocrats, workers, bankers, lawyers,
accountants, teachers, students, disciples,
masters, gurus, beggars, bigots, - Party animals, beasts!!, dogs!!,
- CEO, CFO, CIO, UFO, evp, vip,
- IC (Indian Chief)
18Ad hoc categories
- People I adore, People I admire, People I hang
around, People I need, People I avoid. - Things I love, Things I enjoy, Places I love,
Food I hate, music I like, movies I enjoy - countries I want to visit, restaurants I avoid
19- Circles, triangles, squares, dots, lines,
rectangles, plane, - 1, 2, 3, 4, 100, 120,
- A, B, C, D,..
-
20The format of representing a category
21When we say dog, whats going on in our mind?
- What is the mental representation of
categories? - How do we distinguish in our mind
- a dog from a cat?
- a circle from a triangle?
- Whats going on?
- What is the structure?
- What is the neural connections?
22Which woman looks more attractive/friendly/pleasan
t/capable?
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24Concepts
- What determines dog vs. cat or table vs.
vegetable, game vs. sport,..
25Classical view
- Necessary sufficient rule
- we store definitions.
Circle --gt an area circumscribed by an
equidistant curve. Triangles --gt an area
circumscribed by three straight lines having
three angles..
A circle of friends, Dupon circle, Columbus
Circle, Circle line
Bermuda triangles, triangle defense (Chicago
Bulls)
26- Brother, sister, mother, father, uncle,
- Some concepts may be organized with specific
rules. - But how about other categories?
- Game?
- Basketball, softball, horse race, chess, a wheel
of fortune, survivor, roulette, love affair,
computer game, Super Mario? - furniture
- desk, table, rug? Bed? Computer? TV?
27Alternative view
28Concepts and categories
- Pink is basically red.
- 99 is almost 100.
- Orange is sort of yellow.
- Austin is like Rome.
- San Antonio is very much like Mexico.
- Pita can be bread.
29Concepts and categories II
- Red is basically pink.
- 100 is almost 99.
- Yellow is almost orange.
- Rome is like Austin.
- Mexico is very much like San Antonio.
- Bread can be pita.
30Birds which one looks more like bird?
31Which desk is the best example of desk?
32Which game is the best example of game?
- Baseball
- Chess
- Basketball
- Politics
- Football
- Golf
- One-night love affair
- Snowboarding
- Checker
- Ping-Pong
- Slot machine
- Poker
- Mahjong
- Horse racing
- NASCAR racing
33Fruit vs. Vegetable
- Onion
- Carrot
- Pepper
- Potato
- Jalapeno
- Cucumber
- Bitter Melon
- Spinach
- Garlic
- Ginger
- Broccoli
- Plantain
- Lettuce
- Cabbage
- Pumpkin
- Banana
- Apple
- Melon
- Grapes
- Lemon
- Avocado
- Orange
- Grape fruit
- Kiwi
- Papaya
- Mango
- Lime
- Tomato
34Example
- Fruits ? banana
- Sweet, can eat without cooking, lots of vitamin,
from tropical countries, soft, ripe quickly, easy
to eat, kids love it, tasty, can bring it for
hiking - Vegetables ? carrot
- Not sweet, not tasty, require some cooking, lots
of vitamin, from anywhere, hard, stay long, kids
dont like it, hard
35Probabilistic view
- The boundaries of categories are fuzzy
(probabilistically determined). - Some members are more probable than others.
- But we are pretty sure about what dog means.
- How do we mentally represent categorical
knowledge?
36Organization of categories
- Members of categories are organized in relation
to some focal members. (prototype) - Focal members play the role of a reference
point. - The boundaries of categories may be fuzzy, but
people know pretty well which items are
good/bad members of a category. - Penguin vs. robin, chair vs. rug,
37Measuring goodness of category members
- Rosch et al. (1975)
- Experiments
- Subjects were given a list containing the names
of category members. - Subjects rated (using a 1-10 scale) the goodness
of membership. - E.g., given pistol, subjects rated how good a
pistol is as a member of the category weapons.
38- Furniture (chair, lamp, rug, dresser, desk,
stove, table, stool, television, fan, bed,
television, counter) - Fruit (apple, grapefruit, watermelon, banana,
cherries, boysenberry, pear, strawberries, lemon,
orange, pineapple, nut) - Vehicle (car, airplane, sled, bus, bicycle,
wheelchair, truck, boat, tractor, ambulance,
trolley, wagon). - Weapon (pistol, arrow, slingshot, sword,
tomahawk, whip, knife, cannon, fist, rifle, club,
bow) - Vegetable (peas, celery, mushrooms, corn,
turnips, potatoes, carrots, tomatoes, green
onions, green beans, artichoke, pumpkin). - Other categories, bird, sport, toy, clothing.
39Results
- Correlations 0.95 or up (1 is perfect
correlation) - People agree very much which items are good/bad
examples of a particular category. - Categories have good examples and bad
examples. - The boundaries of categories are graded, and may
be arranged probabilistically with goodness of
membership. - What determine goodness? Or what makes a
particular item a good example of a category?
40Typicality and feature distribution
- What makes an item a typical member of a
category. - How do we perceive a particular item a typical
member of a given category?
41Family resemblance Rosch Mervis (1975)
- Distribution of attributes (features)
- The most typical item in a category has the most
features in common with other members of a
category, - and the fewest features in common with the member
of contrasting categories. - These items are ideal examples and may be
referred to as prototype.
42Which woman looks more attractive/friendly/pleasan
t/capable?
43Which woman looks more attractive/friendly/pleasan
t/capable?
44 45Who is he/she?
46- Morphed images of two different human faces
- ( Angelina Jolie Brad Pitt by Na Yung Yu)
47By Na Yung Yu
48By me
49Just averaging the two faces
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51Vertical structure of categories
- Why dog rather than animal?
- Categories have a vertical structure.
- Not all levels of categories are created equal.
- One intermediate level of categories, which is
called, basic level categories, plays a crucial
role in our perceptual and cognitive operations
52Rosch et al. (1978)
- Basic (intermediate) level categories
- Most efficient in identification
- Evokes specific visual representations
- People use this level exclusively for naming
- Kids tend to learn these names earlier than other
levels of categories
53Exp. 1
- Speed of classification
- Shown a category name (animal -upper level,
dog-intermediate level, or German shepherd low
level) followed by a picture. - Subjects responded whether the category name
matched with the picture (pressing a either yes
or no key)
54Bear
Animal
Polar bear
55Results
Basic level items are the easiest to classify
56Basic level categories and representation
- Basic level categories evoke specific visual
representations. - Given furniture, what kind of representation do
you have in your mind? - How about desk?
- Basic level category names evokes a specific
pictorial representation
57Rosh et al. (1978)
- Object matching task and priming
- Object matching task
- Two pictures were shown on a screen briefly side
by side. - Subjects task was to indicate whether or not the
two pictures depicted identical objects
582 conditions
- Primed trials
- 2 seconds before the presentation of picture
pairs, the category name of one of the pair was
presented. - Non primed trials
- No names were given prior to the trials.
- Dependent measure
- Accuracy and response time
59Procedure (primed condition)
Animal / cat / Persian cat
Depending on trials, upper (animal), basic
(intermediate), or low level (Persian cat)
category names appeared.
Yes/no
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61- 15 subjects ? primed with upper level names
(animal) - 15 subjects ? primed with basic level names (dog)
- 15 subjects ? low level names (German shepherd)
- All the subjects were also given non-primed
trials.
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64mammal
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70Results
71Interpretation
- Given the name of a basic level category, people
form a specific pictorial representation.
72Categories/Concept
- Categories have a structure.
- Horizontal structure
- Distinction between dogs vs. Cats.
- Prototype, family resemblance
- The most typical item in a category has the most
features in common with other members of a
category, - and the fewest features in common with the member
of contrasting categories. - Vertical structure
- (Animal, mammal, dog, German Shepherd)
- The mid-level categories that we used for naming
are called basic level categories. - Basic level categories have cognitive and
perceptual significance.