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Journey to the Center of the Category: The Dissociation in Amnesia between Categorization and Recognition

  • SUNY Buffalo
  • University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

65 Scopus citations

Abstract

The authors' theoretical analysis of the dissociation in amnesia between categorization and recognition suggests these conclusions: (a) Comparing to-be-categorized items to a category center or prototype produces strong prototype advantages and steep typicality gradients, whereas comparing to-be-categorized items to the training exemplars that surround the prototype produces weak prototype advantages and flat typicality gradients; (b) participants often show the former pattern, suggesting their use of prototypes; (c) exemplar models account poorly for these categorization data, but prototype models account well for them; and (d) the recognition data suggest that controls use a single-comparison exemplar-memorization process more powerfully than amnesics. By pairing categorization based in prototypes with recognition based in exemplar memorization, the authors support and extend other recent accounts of cognitive performance that intermix prototypes and exemplars, and the authors reinforce traditional interpretations of the categorization-recognition dissociation in amnesia.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)984-1002
Number of pages19
JournalJournal of Experimental Psychology: Learning Memory and Cognition
Volume27
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 2001

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