scholarly journals Initial Training With Difficult Items Facilitates Information Integration, but Not Rule-Based Category Learning

2008 ◽  
Vol 19 (11) ◽  
pp. 1169-1177 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian J. Spiering ◽  
F. Gregory Ashby

Previous research has disagreed about whether a difficult cognitive skill is best learned by beginning with easy or difficult examples. Two experiments that clarify this debate are reported. Participants in both experiments received one of three types of training on a difficult perceptual categorization task. In one condition, participants began with easy examples, then moved to examples of intermediate difficulty, and finished with the most difficult examples. In a second condition, this order was reversed, and in a third condition, participants saw examples in a random order. The results depended on the type of categories that participants were learning. When the categories could be learned via explicit reasoning (a rule-based task), the three training procedures were equally effective. However, when the categorization rule was difficult to describe verbally (an information-integration task), participants who began with the most difficult items performed much better than participants in the other two conditions.

2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Botskaris ◽  
B. Kriengwatana ◽  
C. ten Cate

AbstractThe survival of organisms depends highly on their ability to adjust their behavior according to proper categorizations of various events. More than one strategy can be used in categorization. One is the Rule-Based (RB) strategy and the other is Information-Integration (II) strategy. In this research we analyzed the differences between avian and human cognition. Twelve Greek listeners and four Zebra finches were tested in speech category learning tasks. In particular, both humans and Zebra finches had to categorize between Dutch vowels that differ on duration, frequency or both depending on the condition. Feedback was given for correct and incorrect responses. The results showed that humans and Zebra finches are probably using the same methods of learning depending on the categorization tasks that they are exposed to. If Zebra Finches are actually able to acquire (RB) and (II) category structures using the same strategies as humans, the utility of multiple systems of categorization might not be restricted to primates as current literature suggest.


2010 ◽  
Vol 48 (10) ◽  
pp. 2998-3008 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. Todd Maddox ◽  
Jennifer Pacheco ◽  
Maia Reeves ◽  
Bo Zhu ◽  
David M. Schnyer

Author(s):  
W. Todd Maddox ◽  
J. Vincent Filoteo ◽  
J. Scott Lauritzen ◽  
Emily Connally ◽  
Kelli D. Hejl

2006 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-43 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Nomura ◽  
W. Maddox ◽  
J. Filoteo ◽  
A. Ing ◽  
D. Gitelman ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Casey L Roark ◽  
Kirsten Smayda ◽  
Bharath Chandrasekaran

We compare the ability of amateur musicians and non-musicians in learning artificial auditory and visual categories that can be described as either rule-based (RB) or information-integration (II) category structures. RB categories are optimally learned using a reflective reasoning process, whereas II categories are optimally learned by integrating information from two stimulus dimensions at a reflexive, pre-decisional processing stage. Across two experiments, we found that music experience was beneficial to learning auditory categories. In Experiment 1, musicians enrolled in a music college demonstrated advantages over non-musicians in learning RB auditory categories defined on pitch frequency and duration dimensions but did not demonstrate differences in learning II auditory categories or either RB or II visual categories. In Experiment 2, a broader online sample of musicians demonstrated advantages over non-musicians in learning both RB and II auditory categories defined on spectral and temporal modulation dimensions. Musicians’ category learning advantage is limited to their modality of expertise and is category-specific in a way that depends on the dimensions used to define the categories.


2013 ◽  
Vol 20 (6) ◽  
pp. 1343-1349 ◽  
Author(s):  
Helen Tam ◽  
W. Todd Maddox ◽  
Cynthia L. Huang-Pollock

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charlotte E R Edmunds ◽  
Angus Inkster ◽  
Peter M Jones ◽  
Fraser Milton ◽  
Andy Wills

Analogical transfer has been previously reported to occur between rule-based, but not information-integration, perceptual category structures (Casale, Roeder, & Ashby, 2012). The current study investigated whether a similar pattern of results would be observed in cross-modality transfer. Participants were trained on either a rule-based structure, or an information-integration structure, using visual stimuli. They were then tested on auditory stimuli that had the same underlying abstract category structure. Transfer performance was assessed relative to a control group who did not receive training on the visual stimuli. No cross-modality transfer was found, irrespective of the category structure employed.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document