Generalization of novel names for relations in comparison settings: the role of conceptual distance during learning and at test.

Category

Conference Proceedings

Authors

Jean-Pierre Thibaut, Eleanor Stansbury and Arnaud Witt

Year

2018

Title

Generalization of novel names for relations in comparison settings: the role of conceptual distance during learning and at test.

Journal / book / conference

In Proceedings of the 40th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society

Abstract

Relational categories are notoriously difficult to learn. We
studied the impact of comparison on relational concept
learning with a novel word learning task in 3- and 4-year olds.
We contrasted a no-comparison (single) condition and two
comparison conditions. In the latter case, the set of learning
pairs was composed of either close or far pairs (e.g., close
pair: knife1- watermelon, knife2-orange; far pair: axevergreen tree, saw-log, for the “cutter for” relation). We also
manipulated the transfer stimuli semantic distance (near or
distant semantic domain, e.g., a scissor for a piece of paper in
the close case, and a shaver for a face in the far domain case).
The no-comparison condition led to random generalizations in
the younger group only. Overall the close learning condition
and the near transfer condition led to good performance. We
discuss these results in terms of the role of semantic distance
and how participants integrate stimuli depending on distance.

Pages

3314-3319

Keywords

relational categories, relational language, comparisons, conceptual distance

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