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Categories

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6/24/09. Categories. My dog sleeping. My dog. All golden retrievers. All dogs. All canines. ... Each of these is a category. Categorization is the process of ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Categories


1
Categories
  • My dog sleeping. My dog. All golden retrievers.
    All dogs. All canines. All mammals
  • Each of these is a category.
  • Categorization is the process of deciding which
    details matter, and which dont, for some purpose.

2
Bruner, Goodnow, Austin (1956)
  • Categories
  • reduce complexity of environment
  • allow us to generalize lessons
  • guide choice of response
  • make hierarchical knowledge available

3
Two questions about categories
  • 1. What is the structure of natural categories
    like?
  • This is a question about the world.
  • 2. How is information about natural categories
    represented in memory?
  • This is a question about your mind.


4
1. The structure of categories in the world
  • Is the question below a question about the world,
    or about us?
  • Which two are most similar sheep, goats,
    cows?
  • To some extent, the structure of natural
    categories is given by the world.
  • To some extent, it is impressed upon the world
    by human cognition

5
1. The structure of categories in the world
  • Most important work done by Eleanor Rosch.
  • Rosch argued that our categorical knowledge is
    organized in a hierarchy
  • Superordinate, basic level, subordinate.
  • This is a relation of containing.

6
Mammal Dogs Cats Horses Collie
Airedale Persian Siamese Arabian
Superordinate Basic Level Subordinate
7
What is this?
8
The Basic Level
  • The basic level falls between superordinate and
    subordinate levels.
  • Its the one we use when we name an object.
  • Its the one children learn first.
  • Things in a basic level category look like other
    things in the same category but not like things
    in other categories. This quality is not true at
    other levels.


9
Furniture Types of chair
  • Table
  • Chair
  • Lamp
  • Bookcase
  • This is a super-ordinate category
  • Dining room table
  • Patio table
  • Coffee table
  • Picnic table
  • This is a subordinate category

10
Review Hierarchy according to Rosch
  • Things in the world present themselves in a
    hierarchy of levels of categorization
  • Basic level, items in a category look like each
    other but not like members of other categories.
  • Basic level is first one learned and one used
    spontaneously in naming objects.

11
Roschs second contribution - Typicality
  • Rosch argued that some members of a category are
    better than others that is, more typical.
  • such members have family resemblance.
  • typical members can be verified fastest
    (implying fast access to their repns.)
  • typical members are similar to other members,
    unlike non-members of category

12
Things in the world vs. in the head
  • So far, weve been talking about things in the
    world. We asked, how do these things assemble
    into categories?
  • Now, we turn to the question of things in your
    head.
  • What is the nature of your knowledge about
    categories? How are they represented?

13
2. Mental representation of categories
  • Three kinds of categories
  • Natural (e.g., Mammals)
  • Artificial (e.g., Animals that weigh gt 100
    pounds)
  • Functional (e.g., Things to bring out of the
    house in case of fire.)
  • Well consider only natural categories

14
Mental representation of natural categories
  • There are four competing models. Each specifies
    how a decision on category membership is made
    (how do you decide if this is an X?). Note they
    might all be wrong.
  • 1. Prototype
  • 2. Feature frequency
  • 3. Nearest neighbour
  • 4. Average distance

15
Prototype models
  • A prototype is a typical member of a category
  • Prototype theories say that, through experience,
    we create a central example of each category, and
    store that example.
  • A prototype captures what is typical of a
    category
  • A prototype may exist only in your mind (e.g.,
    not as an actual object in the world).

16
Feature frequency models
  • Categorization is based on how many features the
    to-be-classified object shares with each of the
    available categories.
  • E.g., a whale shares breathes air and gives
    birth to live young with mammals. It shares
    lives in the ocean and moves by tail and
    flipper action with fish.
  • So a whale could be a fish or a mammal
  • Models predict confusion about whales


17
Nearest neighbour models
  • New object is compared with each exemplar of each
    stored category.
  • Difference (on any dimensions) between object
    and each exemplar in each category is computed.
  • New object is classified in same category as
    object it is most similar to (smallest
    difference).

18
Category Clothing
19
Average distance models
  • Comparison of new object to all stored exemplars
    of categories as in N. Neighbour.
  • Object goes in category with smallest average
    distance (exemplars to object).
  • Compare with Nearest Neighbour model here, it
    is average distance for the category, not just
    which exemplar is closest, that counts.

20
Review models of representation
  • These models reflect 2 very different views of
    category representation
  • Prototype model
  • what is generally true about something is
    stored and available when needed
  • this view emphasizes abstract representations
    (that is, not much detail)

21
Review models of representation
  • N.N. and A.D. models
  • what is generally true is not stored, but
    computed when needed.
  • these views emphasize storage of individual
    experiences with objects rather than storage of
    abstract essences.
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