Dear all,
The next talk in the CEU Cognitive Science seminar series will by given by:
Anett Ragó (Department of Cognitive Psychology, ELTE)
Date: Wednesday, September 10, 2014, 5 PM
Location: Department of Cognitive Science, Frankel Leo ut 30-04. 1023 Budapest
Room: G15
Title: Acquisition and long-term retention of the categorization rule in case of
naturalistic stimuli
Categorization is a decision making process where we selectively attend to the most
distinguishing features of the categories. During learning we transfer the
category-specific response to all members of the category, by eliminating individual
differences and focusing on similarities.
We investigated the nature of the abstraction process during which participants learned
the categorization rule in a supervised category-learning paradigm. An information
integration task was used with naturalistic Gestalt-like stimuli, where all the exemplars
(72 different items during learning) also possessed additional idiosyncratic features.
The learning strategies, the exemplar effect, and the retention of the categorization rule
were tested in behavioral experiments. Our developmental study compared 7-8 year-olds and
adults, and we conducted an electrophysiological (ERP) experiment to understand the
learning mechanism better.
Hit rates and reaction time results show that participants were able to learn the complex
categorization rule without realizing that they have learnt it. Moreover, this general
knowledge was stable a week later. Their memory for individual exemplars in the immediate
test was as weak as a week later. Behavioral data was inaccurate in case of learning
strategies, but the ERP components were sensitive to the changes in them. Later components
didn’t, but the response and feed-back related components (ERN and FRN) indicated the
changes during the three learning blocks. The differences between school children and
adults showed different learning strategies as less of children than adults were able to
learn the categorization rule. This implies that children are not able to inhibit the
explicit strategies as successfully as adults do.
Generally, our results show that the standard category learning paradigm is extendable to
more complex and naturalistic stimuli. With our method we could test the long-term
retention of the learned information, and the memory for individual exemplars both in
children and adults.
PLEASE NOTE: Our seminar room has a limited capacity. Please arrive early to ensure you
get a seat. The talk will begin promptly at 5.
Cognitive Science Events at CEU:
http://cognitivescience.ceu.hu/events
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