Son Ji Y, Smith Linda B, Goldstone Robert L
Department of Psychology, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA.
Cognition. 2008 Sep;108(3):626-38. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2008.05.002. Epub 2008 Jun 18.
Development in any domain is often characterized by increasingly abstract representations. Recent evidence in the domain of shape recognition provides one example; between 18 and 24 months children appear to build increasingly abstract representations of object shape [Smith, L. B. (2003). Learning to recognize objects. Psychological Science, 14, 244-250]. Abstraction is in part simplification because it requires the removal of irrelevant information. At the same time, part of generalization is ignoring irrelevant differences. The resulting prediction is this: simplification may enable generalization. Four experiments asked whether simple training instances could shortcut the process of abstraction and directly promote appropriate generalization. Toddlers were taught novel object categories with either simple or complex training exemplars. We found that children who learned with simple objects were able to generalize according to shape similarity, typically relevant for early object categories, better than those who learned with complex objects. Abstraction is the product of learning; using simplified - already abstracted instances - can short-cut that learning, leading to robust generalization.
任何领域的发展通常都以越来越抽象的表征为特征。形状识别领域的最新证据提供了一个例子;18至24个月大的儿童似乎构建了越来越抽象的物体形状表征[史密斯,L.B.(2003年)。学习识别物体。《心理科学》,14,244 - 250]。抽象在一定程度上是简化,因为它需要去除无关信息。同时,泛化的一部分是忽略无关差异。由此得出的预测是:简化可能有助于泛化。四项实验探讨了简单的训练实例是否可以缩短抽象过程并直接促进适当的泛化。用简单或复杂的训练范例向幼儿教授新颖的物体类别。我们发现,用简单物体学习的儿童比用复杂物体学习的儿童更能根据形状相似性进行泛化,而形状相似性通常与早期物体类别相关。抽象是学习的产物;使用简化的——已经抽象的实例——可以缩短学习过程,从而实现强大的泛化。