Journal article
An integrated account of generalization across objects and features
C Kemp, P Shafto, JB Tenenbaum
Cognitive Psychology | ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE | Published : 2012
Abstract
Humans routinely make inductive generalizations about unobserved features of objects. Previous accounts of inductive reasoning often focus on inferences about a single object or feature: accounts of causal reasoning often focus on a single object with one or more unobserved features, and accounts of property induction often focus on a single feature that is unobserved for one or more objects. We explore problems where people must make inferences about multiple objects and features, and propose that people solve these problems by integrating knowledge about features with knowledge about objects. We evaluate three computational methods for integrating multiple systems of knowledge: the output ..
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Awarded by National Science Foundation
Funding Acknowledgements
An early version of this work was prepared in collaboration with Allison Berke and presented at the Neural Information Processing Systems conference in 2006. We thank Keith Holyoak and three anonymous reviewers for helpful comments on the manuscript, and Bob Rehder and Brian Milch for valuable discussions. This work was supported in part by NSF award CDI-0835797, the Pittsburgh Life Sciences Greenhouse Opportunity Fund, AFOSR MURI contract FA9550-05-1-0321, the William Asbjornsen Albert memorial fellowship (CK) and the Paul E. Newton Chair (JBT).