Department of Neuroscience, Columbia University, New York, NY, USA.
Zuckerman Mind Brain Behavior Institute, Columbia University, 3227 Broadway, New York, NY, 10027, USA.
Mem Cognit. 2021 Jul;49(5):1020-1035. doi: 10.3758/s13421-020-01136-z. Epub 2021 Feb 9.
The implied order of a ranked set of visual images can be learned without reliance on information that explicitly signals their order. Such learning is difficult to explain by associative mechanisms, but can be accounted for by cognitive representations and processes such as transitive inference. Our study sought to determine if those processes also apply to learning categories of images. We asked whether participants can (a) infer that stimulus images belonged to familiar categories, even when the images for each trial were unique, and (b) sort those categories into an ordering that obeys transitivity. Participants received minimal verbal instruction and a single session of training. Despite this, they learned the implied order of lists of fixed stimuli and lists of ordered categories, using trial-unique exemplars. We trained two groups, one for which stimuli were constant throughout training and testing (n = 60), and one for which exemplars of each category were trial-unique (n = 50). Our findings suggest that differing cognitive processes may underpin serial learning when learning about specific stimuli as opposed to stimulus categories.
一组按等级排列的视觉图像的隐含顺序可以在不依赖于明确表示其顺序的信息的情况下学习。这种学习很难用联想机制来解释,但可以用认知表征和传递推理等认知过程来解释。我们的研究旨在确定这些过程是否也适用于学习图像类别。我们想知道参与者是否能够:(a)即使在每次试验的图像都是独特的情况下,也能推断出刺激图像属于熟悉的类别;(b)将这些类别按传递性的顺序进行排序。参与者接受了最少的口头指导和一次培训。尽管如此,他们还是使用每个试验的独特示例学习了固定刺激列表和有序类别列表的隐含顺序。我们训练了两组参与者,一组参与者在整个培训和测试过程中使用的刺激都是固定的(n = 60),另一组参与者则使用每个类别的独特示例(n = 50)。我们的研究结果表明,在学习特定刺激而不是刺激类别时,不同的认知过程可能是序列学习的基础。