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Analogical Reasoning

Analogical Reasoning. What to do. How do you decide what to buy? Use your past experience. How do you figure out which experience is relevant?. Using prior knowledge. Use of prior knowledge is guided by similarity That makes similarity an interesting thing to study.

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Analogical Reasoning

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  1. Analogical Reasoning

  2. What to do... • How do you decide what to buy? • Use your past experience. How do you figure out which experience is relevant?

  3. Using prior knowledge • Use of prior knowledge is guided by similarity • That makes similarity an interesting thing to study. How can we study this process when we don’t know what is in someone’s head?

  4. Studying pairs of items • Study perceptions of similarity when all information is available.

  5. Contrast model • Tversky (1977) • Similarity increases with common features • Similarity decreases with common features • Had people list features of concepts • Had other people rate the similarity of concepts • Compared the feature lists • Found common and distinctive features • Similarity ratings were positively related to the number of common features • Similarity ratings were negatively related to the number of distinctive features.

  6. Analogy • Often, things being compared are not very similar. • How are these similar?

  7. Analogies preserve relations • The Atom and the Solar System have similar relations among their parts. • The attributes of the objects are not similar. • The nucleus is not hot • The planets are not small.

  8. Structure mapping • Structured representations • Relations connect the things they relate • Items are placed in correspondence when they play the same role in a matching relational system

  9. Analogical Inference • Can make inferences about target domain • Inferences based on correspondences between the base and target. • Allows us to learn from experience.

  10. Types of similarity These principles hold for all different types of similarity.

  11. Structural alignment • Markman & Gentner • Cross-mapping • Mapping task • Similarity rating • Mapping first • Object mapping • Similarity first • Relation mapping • Relational similarity is important, even in similarity

  12. Commonalities and differences • What are the commonalities and differences? Commonalities Something being towed

  13. Commonalities and differences • What are the commonalities and differences? Commonalities Alignable Differences Car vs. Boat being towed

  14. Commonalities and differences • What are the commonalities and differences? Parking meter in top scene. Commonalities Alignable Differences Nonalignable Differences Comparisons focus on commonalities and alignable differences.

  15. Focus on alignable differences • Gentner & Markman (1994) • Page with 40 word pairs • 20 highly similar, 20 highly dissimilar • List one difference for as many pairs as possible • More differences listed for similar pairs than dissimilar pairs. • Reflects that alignable differences are easier to find for similar pairs than for dissimilar pairs • Hotel-Motel • Magazine-Kitten

  16. Similarity and cognition • Similarity enables us to use background knowledge • Recognize how a new case is like an old one. • Structure mapping/structural alignment • Relations are important in similarity comparisons • Commonalities + Alignable differences are key • Nonalignable differences are less important • Differences are easy to find for similar things • Structural alignment affects cognitive processing • Ongoing research suggests that alignable differences are important in many different cognitive processes.

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