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Ch. 8: Categories and concepts

Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

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Page 1: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Ch. 8: Categories and concepts

Page 2: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Concept and Knowledge

• Topic:

– How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Page 3: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Concepts, beliefs and behavior

Page 4: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Concept/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

Page 5: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Psychiatric disorders

• Anxiety disorder– Is created by an lingering belief on something

threatening happens

• Maniac depression– Disbelief on one’s ability, fate, etc.

Page 6: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

• 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

Political language:

Page 7: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Stereotype

• Ethnic conflicts

Page 8: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Concept and memory?

• Are they two different things?

Page 9: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

What is the structure of “concept”?

This is the today’s topic.

Page 10: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Demonstration:

• Tell me what you see as accurately as possible.

Page 11: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?
Page 12: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?
Page 13: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Why 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”?

Page 14: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

What is “concept”?

• I don’t know– But maybe concept we have is related to the

way we categorize things

Page 15: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Concept --> categories

• In order to study “concept”, I’ll talk about “categories” .

Page 16: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

There 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,

Page 17: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

– 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)

Page 18: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Ad 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

Page 19: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

• Circles, triangles, squares, dots, lines, rectangles, plane,

• 1, 2, 3, 4, 100, 120,

• A, B, C, D,…..

Page 20: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

The format of representing a category

Page 21: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

When we say “dog,” what’s 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?

• What’s going on?– What is the structure?– What is the neural connections?

Page 22: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Which woman looks more attractive/friendly/pleasant/capable?

Page 23: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?
Page 24: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Concepts

• What determines “dog” vs. “cat” or “table” vs. “vegetable”, “game” vs. “sport”,…..

Page 25: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Classical view

• Necessary & sufficient rule– we store definitions.

Circle --> an area circumscribed by an equidistant curve.

Triangles --> 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)

Page 26: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

• 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?

Page 27: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Alternative view

Page 28: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Concepts 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.

Page 29: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Concepts 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.

Page 30: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Birds: which one looks more like “bird”?

Page 31: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Which desk is the best example of “desk”?

Page 32: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Which 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

Page 33: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Fruit vs. Vegetable

BananaAppleMelonGrapesLemonAvocadoOrangeGrape fruitKiwiPapayaMangoLimeTomato

OnionCarrot

PepperPotatoJalapenoCucumberBitter MelonSpinachGarlicGingerBroccoliPlantainLettuceCabbagePumpkin

Page 34: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Example:

• 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 don’t like it, hard

Page 35: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Probabilistic 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?

Page 36: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Organization 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,

Page 37: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Measuring “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.”

Page 38: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

• 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.

Page 39: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Results:

– 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?

Page 40: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Typicality 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?

Page 41: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Family 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.”

Page 42: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Which woman looks more attractive/friendly/pleasant/capable?

Page 43: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Which woman looks more attractive/friendly/pleasant/capable?

Page 44: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

+ =

Page 45: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Who is he/she?

12

Page 46: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Morphed images of two different human faces

( Angelina Jolie – Brad Pitt by Na Yung Yu)

1 4 6 9

12 15 19 20

Page 47: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

By Na Yung Yu

Page 48: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

By me

Page 49: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Just averaging the two faces

Page 50: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?
Page 51: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Vertical 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

Page 52: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Rosch 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

Page 53: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Exp. 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)

Page 54: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

BearAnimal Polar bear

Page 55: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Results :

Response time (ms)Superordinate Basic level Subordinate

TRUE 591 535 659FALSE 630 578 642

Rosch et. al (1975)

Basic level items are the easiest to classify

Page 56: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Basic 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

Page 57: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Rosh 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

Page 58: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

2 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

Page 59: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Procedure (primed condition)

Yes/no

Animal / cat / Persian catDepending on trials, upper (animal), basic (intermediate), or low level (Persian cat) category names appeared.

Page 60: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?
Page 61: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

• 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.

Page 62: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

animal

Page 63: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?
Page 64: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

mammal

Page 65: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?
Page 66: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

cat

Page 67: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?
Page 68: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

kitten

Page 69: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?
Page 70: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Results:

  RT for “Same”    

Priming conditions

Superordinate(animal)

Basic level name (cat)

Subordinate (kitten)

Primed 620 554 568

Unprimed 592 601 612

Difference -18 47 44

Page 71: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Interpretation

• Given the name of a basic level category, people form a specific pictorial representation.

Page 72: Ch. 8: Categories and concepts Concept and Knowledge Topic: –How do we store and manipulate a concept in the brain?

Categories/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.