Mary Jo Rattermann
Franklin & Marshall College
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Archive | 1991
Dedre Gentner; Mary Jo Rattermann
Similarity has been cast both as hero and as villain in theories of cognitive processing, and the same is true for cognitive development. On the positive side, Rosch and her colleagues have suggested that similarity is an initial organizing principle in the development of categorization (e.g., Rosch, Mervis, Gray, Johnson, & Boyes-Braem, 1976), and Carey (1985) implicates a similarity mechanism in childrens learning of the biological domain. It has also been suggested that similarity may play a role in word acquisition (Anglin, 1970; Bowerman, 1973, 1976; E. V. Clark, 1973; Davidson & Gelman, 1990; Gentner, 1982c). Others have taken a more pessimistic view, according to which similarity is either a misleading or at best an inferior strategy used as a last resort. Keil (1989), for example, posits that children begin with theories of the world and that
Cognitive Development | 1998
Mary Jo Rattermann; Dedre Gentner
Abstract Gentner (1988) has proposed a relational shift whereby children interpret analogy and metaphor first in terms of object similarity and then in terms of relational similarity. Goswami (1996) argues against the relational shift hypothesis, citing as evidence a study performed by Goswami and Brown (1989) in which 3-, 4-, and 6-year-old children were able to correctly complete pictorial A:B::C:? analogies based on familiar causal relations, and, contrary to the predictions of the relational shift hypothesis, made very few object-similarity errors despite the presence of an object-similarity choice. In the present experiment we obtained similarity ratings of Goswami and Browns stimuli and found that the materials did not contain a true object similarity choice and therefore that study was not an adequate test of the relational shift hypothesis. After appropriate modifications to their methodology, we found that 4- and 5-year-old childrens performance was consistent with the relational shift hypothesis: First, object-similarity errors were highly frequent initially and decreased with age; second, the rate of relational (correct) responding increased with age; and third, performance on the analogues was positively related to childrens knowledge about the participating causal relations. We conclude by proposing an explanation for the relational shift based on an alignment view of similarity comparison and, further, suggest a new role for object similarity in childrens analogical development.
Cognitive Psychology | 1993
Dedre Gentner; Mary Jo Rattermann; Kenneth D. Forbus
Archive | 2002
Dedre Gentner; Mary Jo Rattermann; Arthur B. Markman; Laura Kotovsky
Archive | 1987
Mary Jo Rattermann; Dedre Gentner
Cognitive Science | 2001
Mary Jo Rattermann; Lee Spector; Jordan Grafman; Harvey S. Levin; Harriet Harward
Behavioral and Brain Sciences | 1998
Dedre Gentner; Mary Jo Rattermann
Archive | 1991
Dedre Gentner; Mary Jo Rattermann
national conference on artificial intelligence | 1994
Lee Spector; Mary Jo Rattermann; Kristen Prentice
Archive | 1991
Laura Kotovsky; Ronald Mawby; Robert Mitchell; Betsy Perry; Mary Jo Rattermann; Brian Ross; Robert Schumacher