Learning sameness: object and relational similarity across species

2021 ◽  
Vol 37 ◽  
pp. 41-46
Author(s):  
Stella Christie
2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffrey N. Chiang ◽  
Yujia Peng ◽  
Hongjing Lu ◽  
Keith J. Holyoak ◽  
Martin M. Monti

AbstractThe ability to generate and process semantic relations is central to many aspects of human cognition. Theorists have long debated whether such relations are coded as atomistic links in a semantic network, or as distributed patterns over some core set of abstract relations. The form and content of the conceptual and neural representations of semantic relations remains to be empirically established. The present study combined computational modeling and neuroimaging to investigate the representation and comparison of abstract semantic relations in the brain. By using sequential presentation of verbal analogies, we decoupled the neural activity associated with encoding the representation of the first-order semantic relation between words in a pair from that associated with the second-order comparison of two relations. We tested alternative computational models of relational similarity in order to distinguish between rival accounts of how semantic relations are coded and compared in the brain. Analyses of neural similarity patterns supported the hypothesis that semantic relations are coded, in the parietal cortex, as distributed representations over a pool of abstract relations specified in a theory-based taxonomy. These representations, in turn, provide the immediate inputs to the process of analogical comparison, which draws on a broad frontoparietal network. This study sheds light not only on the form of relation representations but also on their specific content.SignificanceRelations provide basic building blocks for language and thought. For the past half century, cognitive scientists exploring human semantic memory have sought to identify the code for relations. In a neuroimaging paradigm, we tested alternative computational models of relation processing that predict patterns of neural similarity during distinct phases of analogical reasoning. The findings allowed us to draw inferences not only about the form of relation representations, but also about their specific content. The core of these distributed representations is based on a relatively small number of abstract relation types specified in a theory-based taxonomy. This study helps to resolve a longstanding debate concerning the nature of the conceptual and neural code for semantic relations in the mind and brain.


2021 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Wenguang Yang ◽  
Lianhai Lin ◽  
Hongkui Gao

PurposeTo solve the problem of simulation evaluation with small samples, a fresh approach of grey estimation is presented based on classical statistical theory and grey system theory. The purpose of this paper is to make full use of the difference of data distribution and avoid the marginal data being ignored.Design/methodology/approachBased upon the grey distribution characteristics of small sample data, the definition about a new concept of grey relational similarity measure comes into being. At the same time, the concept of sample weight is proposed according to the grey relational similarity measure. Based on the new definition of grey weight, the grey point estimation and grey confidence interval are studied. Then the improved Bootstrap resampling is designed by uniform distribution and randomness as an important supplement of the grey estimation. In addition, the accuracy of grey bilateral and unilateral confidence intervals is introduced by using the new grey relational similarity measure approach.FindingsThe new small sample evaluation method can realize the effective expansion and enrichment of data and avoid the excessive concentration of data. This method is an organic fusion of grey estimation and improved Bootstrap method. Several examples are used to demonstrate the feasibility and validity of the proposed methods to illustrate the credibility of some simulation data, which has no need to know the probability distribution of small samples.Originality/valueThis research has completed the combination of grey estimation and improved Bootstrap, which makes more reasonable use of the value of different data than the unimproved method.


2012 ◽  
Vol E95.D (8) ◽  
pp. 2116-2123 ◽  
Author(s):  
Danushka BOLLEGALA ◽  
Yutaka MATSUO ◽  
Mitsuru ISHIZUKA

Author(s):  
TANVEER J. SIDDIQUI ◽  
UMA SHANKER TIWARY

Our research focuses on the use of local context through relation matching to improve retrieval effectiveness. An information retrieval (IR) model that integrates relation and keyword matching has been used in this work. The model takes advantage of any existing relational similarity between documents and query to improve retrieval effectiveness. It gives high rank to a document in which the query concepts are involved in similar relationships as in the query, as compared to those in which they are related differently. A conceptual graph (CG) representation has been used to capture relationship between concepts. A simplified form of graph matching has been used to keep our model computationally tractable. Structural variations have been captured during matching through simple heuristics. Four different CG similarity measures have been proposed and used to evaluate performance of our model. We observed a maximum improvement of 7.37% in precision with the second CG similarity measure. The document collection used in this study is CACM-3204. CG similarity measure proposed by us is simple, flexible and scalable and can find application in many IR related tasks like information filtering, information extraction, question answering, document summarization, etc.


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