Month: September 2021

Distributional Models of Category Concepts Based on Names of Category Members

Abstract Cognitive scientists have long used distributional semantic representations of categories. The predominant approach uses distributional representations of category-denoting nouns, such as “city” for the category city. We propose a novel scheme that represents categories as prototypes over representations of names of its members, such as “Barcelona,” “Mumbai,” and “Wuhan” for the category city. This […]

Published on September 22, 2021

Limits on the Agent‐First Strategy: Evidence from Children’s Comprehension of a Transitive Construction in Korean

Abstract It has long been believed across languages that the Agent-First strategy, a comprehension heuristic that maps the first noun onto the agent role, is a general cognitive bias which applies automatically and faithfully to children’s comprehension. The present study asks how this strategy interplays with such grammatical cues as the number of overt arguments […]

Published on September 22, 2021

Solving the causal inference problem

Perception requires the brain to infer whether signals arise from common causes and should hence be integrated or else be treated independently. Rideaux et al. show that a feedforward network can perform causal inference in visuovestibular motion estimation by reading out activity from neurons tuned to congruent and opposite directions. Read Full Article (External Site) […]

Published on September 22, 2021