Department of Psychology, Stanford University.
Cogn Sci. 2010 Aug;34(6):909-57. doi: 10.1111/j.1551-6709.2009.01092.x. Epub 2010 Jan 29.
Symbols enable people to organize and communicate about the world. However, the ways in which symbolic knowledge is learned and then represented in the mind are poorly understood. We present a formal analysis of symbolic learning-in particular, word learning-in terms of prediction and cue competition, and we consider two possible ways in which symbols might be learned: by learning to predict a label from the features of objects and events in the world, and by learning to predict features from a label. This analysis predicts significant differences in symbolic learning depending on the sequencing of objects and labels. We report a computational simulation and two human experiments that confirm these differences, revealing the existence of Feature-Label-Ordering effects in learning. Discrimination learning is facilitated when objects predict labels, but not when labels predict objects. Our results and analysis suggest that the semantic categories people use to understand and communicate about the world can only be learned if labels are predicted from objects. We discuss the implications of this for our understanding of the nature of language and symbolic thought, and in particular, for theories of reference.
符号使人们能够组织和交流关于世界的信息。然而,人们对符号知识的学习方式以及在大脑中的表现方式知之甚少。我们根据预测和线索竞争,从形式上分析了符号学习——特别是单词学习——并考虑了符号可能被学习的两种可能方式:通过学习从世界上的物体和事件的特征来预测标签,以及通过学习从标签来预测特征。这种分析预测了符号学习取决于对象和标签的顺序会有显著差异。我们报告了一个计算模拟和两个人类实验,证实了这些差异,揭示了学习中存在特征-标签-排序效应。当物体预测标签时,辨别学习会得到促进,但当标签预测物体时则不会。我们的结果和分析表明,只有从物体预测标签,人们才能学习到他们用来理解和交流世界的语义类别。我们讨论了这对我们理解语言和符号思维的本质,特别是对参照理论的影响。