首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
   检索      


Similarity chains in the transformational paradigm
Authors:Emmanuel M Pothos  Ulrike Hahn  Mercè Prat-Sala
Institution:1. Department of Psychology , Swansea University , Swansea, UK e.m.pothos@swansea.ac.uk;3. School of Psychology, Cardiff University , Cardiff, UK;4. Department of Psychology , University of Winchester , Winchester, UK
Abstract:Rips’ (1989) results with the transformational paradigm have often been cited as supporting accounts of categorisation not based on similarity, such as involving necessary or sufficient features (or a belief in such features), which guarantee a categorisation outcome once their presence has been established. We discuss a similarity account of the transformational paradigm based on similarity chains, which predicts that when the transformation is more gradual the identity of the transformed object is less likely to change. Conversely, we suggest that an essentialist approach to categorisation predicts that essences are more likely to change in gradual transformations, across generations, as is the case with evolutionary change of species. In two experiments we examined the scope of the similarity versus the essentialist account in the transformational paradigm. With space aliens, the similarity account was superior to the essentialist one, but the converse was true with earth creatures. We suggest that an essentialist mode of categorisation is more likely than a similarity one for stimuli that are in better correspondence with our naïve understanding of the world.
Keywords:Categorisation  Critical features  Essentialism  General knowledge
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号