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How an unfamiliar thing should be called
Authors:Patricia Baggett  Andrzej Ehrenfeucht
Affiliation:(1) Institute of Cognitive Science, University of Colorado, 80309 Boulder, Colorado;(2) Department of Computer Science, University of Colorado, 80309 Boulder, Colorado;(3) Psychology Department, University of Colorado, Campus Box 345, 80309 Boulder, Colorado
Abstract:An empirical method is described to derive good names for unfamiliar objects. It is based on three principles: (1) The names should be within users' linguistic capacities; (2) names should be informationally efficient; (3) names should form a classification system. The principles lead to a three-step method: (1) Subjects generate names for the objects; (2) a subset of the names, which fulfills the principles, is selected; (3) how good the names are is tested by matching and recall tasks. Steps 2 and 3 are iterated to improve the nnames. The names that result are natural, short, easily matched with their physical referents, and well recalled. The method is generalizable and ought to be useful in a large variety of situations where names for unfamiliar objects are needed.This research was supported by the Office of Naval Research Contract No. N00014-78-C-0433 to the first author. This report is No. 111 of the Institute of Cognitive Science's Technical Report Series.
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