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Category-specific effects on the identification of non-manipulable objects
Authors:McMullen Patricia A  Purdy Kerri S
Affiliation:Department of Psychology and The Neuroscience Institute, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada B3H 4J1. mcmullen@dal.ca
Abstract:Theories of category-specific effects on visual object identification predict easier identification of non-living than living objects. The Sensory-Functional theory credits greater representational weighting of the visual properties of living objects independent of greater weighting of the functional properties of non-living objects. It predicts a lost or reversed non-living advantage for non-manipulable objects. Normal participants matched pictures of non-manipulable objects with words describing three levels of identity while visual object similarity, and concept familiarity were controlled. Consistent with the Sensory-Functional theory, living objects were matched faster than non-living objects. Concept familiarity facilitated subordinate matches. Visual similarity hampered subordinate matches and facilitated basic matches.
Keywords:Category-specificity   Manipulability   Picture–  word matching   Object identification   Concept familiarity   Visual similarity   Sensory–  Functional theory
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