Rabi Rahel, Miles Sarah J, Minda John Paul
Department of Psychology, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario N6H 3N5, Canada.
Department of Psychology, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario N6H 3N5, Canada.
J Exp Child Psychol. 2015 Mar;131:149-69. doi: 10.1016/j.jecp.2014.10.007. Epub 2015 Jan 3.
Two experiments explored the different strategies used by children and adults when learning new perceptual categories. Participants were asked to learn a set of categories for which both a single-feature rule and overall similarity would allow for perfect performance. Other rules allowed for suboptimal performance. Transfer stimuli (Experiments 1 and 2) and single features (Experiment 2) were presented after training to help determine how the categories were learned. In both experiments, we found that adults made significantly more optimal rule-based responses to the test stimuli than children. Children showed a variety of categorization styles, with a few relying on the optimal rules, many relying on suboptimal single-feature rules, and only a few relying on overall family resemblance. We interpret these results within a multiple systems framework, and we argue that children show the pattern they do because they lack the necessary cognitive resources to fully engage in hypothesis testing, rule selection, and verbally mediated category learning.
两项实验探究了儿童和成人在学习新的感知类别时所采用的不同策略。参与者被要求学习一组类别,对于这些类别,单一特征规则和整体相似性都能实现完美表现。其他规则则导致表现欠佳。训练后呈现转移刺激(实验1和2)和单一特征(实验2),以帮助确定类别是如何被学习的。在两项实验中,我们发现成人对测试刺激做出的基于规则的最优反应显著多于儿童。儿童表现出多种分类方式,少数依赖最优规则,许多依赖欠佳的单一特征规则,只有少数依赖整体家族相似性。我们在多重系统框架内解释这些结果,并认为儿童呈现出这样的模式是因为他们缺乏充分参与假设检验、规则选择和语言介导的类别学习所需的认知资源。