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Knowledge Representation --- Images and Propositions. Lecturer: Siyun Liu. Knowledge Structures. Mental Representation of Knowledge » declarative knowledge facts that can be stated knowing that procedural knowledge procedures that can be implemented knowing how .
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Knowledge Representation--- Images and Propositions Lecturer: Siyun Liu
Knowledge Structures • Mental Representation of Knowledge » • declarative knowledge • facts that can be stated • knowing that • procedural knowledge • procedures that can be implemented • knowing how
Knowledge Representations • External Representations » • Internal Representations » Back
External Representations • Pictures » • Words » • The differences between picture representation and word representation » Home
Picture Representations • The picture is relatively analogous to the real-world object it represents; • The picture shows concrete attributes (shape & relative size) that are similar to the features and spatial properties of the real-world object the picture represents. • Pictorial representations convey all features simultaneously Home
Word Representation • Words are symbolic representations • Words capture abstract and categorical information • Representations in words usually convey information sequentially Home
Words Are Symbolic • 拉丁符号:Ç Ì Ñ Ô Ø à ã Ë Đ • 希腊符号:ΎξλζέΪΠΣΘςΰ • 希伯来语:בהלףץסכזא • 汉语:中国 Home
Pictures vs. Words • Neither form of representation actually retains all of the characteristics of what is being represented • Pictures and words represent relationships in different ways Home
Internal Representations • Mental Images » • Propositions » Home
Mental Images • Definition » • Various Forms » Home
Definition of Mental Images • The mental representation of things that are not currently being sensed by the sense organs; • It may represent things that have never been observed by your senses at any time; • It may represent things that do not exist at all. Home
Various Forms • Seeing ------ visual images » • seeing in the absence of a visual stimulus • not presently visible to the eyes • Hearing • Smell • Taste Home
Mental Imagery • Memory Codes of Mental Imagery » • Empirical Investigations of Imagery» • The nature of mental imagery » • Questions about mental images • What are images? • What kinds of properties do images have? • How are these like or unlike the properties that real pictures have? • Neuropsychological Findings » Home
Memory Codes of Mental Imagery • The Dual-Coding Hypothesis » • The Relational-Organizational Hypothesis » Home
The Dual-Coding Hypothesis • Allan Paivio (1969, 1971) • We can use either verbal or imagined codes or both for representing information. • Verbal • Containing information about an item’s abstract, linguistic meaning • Imagined • Mental pictures of some sort that represent what the item looks like • Pictures and concrete words • Both verbal labels and visual images • abstract words • Only verbal label Evidence1 for Dual-Coding Home Evidence2 for Dual-Coding
Evidence for Dual-Coding • Paivio (1965) • four lists of noun pairs • CC: concrete word vs. concrete word • Book vs. Table • CA: concrete word vs. abstract word • Chair vs. Justice • AC: abstract word vs. concrete word • Freedom vs. Dress • AA: abstract word vs. abstract word • Beauty vs. Truth Continue…
Evidence for Dual-Coding • Participants learnt one of four lists, then had a recall test Continue…
Evidence for Dual-Coding • Interpretations for results (1969) • When items are coded by both images and verbal labels, the chances of the learner’s retrieving them are obviously better. • If the learner forgets the verbal label, he or she might still access the visual images, or vice versa. • Items coded only by verbal labels are disadvantages • If the verbal label is forgotten or “misplaced”, the learner has less to go on. Continue…
Evidence for Dual-Coding • Interpretations for results (1969) • The first noun in a pair (“stimulus” noun) serves as a conceptual peg on which the second (“response”) noun is hooked. • The stimulus noun serves as a “mental anchor”, a place to which the representation of the response noun can be attached. • The imaginability of the first noun is particularly important in improving memorability • This is why recall in the CA condition was significantly higher than in the AC condition Continue…
Evidence for Dual-Coding • Interpretations for results • Whenever possible, participants spontaneously formed visual images of the noun pairs • The formation was easiest with concrete nouns • Visual imagery, unlike verbal labelling, increases as a function of concreteness. • The more concrete the noun, the richer the image and the more elaborated the internal code. Return
Evidence for Dual-Coding • Lee Brooks (1968) • Provided evidence that images are distinct from verbal materials or at least use different processes from those used by verbal materials. • Two types of tasks • visual task: • briefly presented a picture, answer questions about it • verbal task: • briefly presented a sentence, make judgment about it • Two types of responses • Visual: point to an answer • Verbal: saying “yes” or “no” Continue…
Evidence for Dual-Coding • Lee Brooks (1968) • Material 1 used in the experiment • Task for material 1 • Findings for task 1 • Material 2 used in the experiment • Task for material 2 • Findings for task 2 Conclusion
Evidence for Dual-Coding A BIRD IN THE HAND IS NOT IN THE BUSH. Start at the corner marked with a dot, and indicate whether or not each corner is at the extreme top or bottom. For each word in the sentence above, indicate whether or not each word is a concrete noun. Return
Evidence for Dual-Coding • Participants responded in different ways • Verbal • Participants say “yes” or “no” • Spatial • Participants were given a response sheet on which the letters Y and N were printed in an irregular pattern, and were told to point to either a Y or an N in each row to indicate their response Return
Evidence for Dual-Coding • Task 1: • Participants took almost two and a half times longer when they responded by pointing than they did by responding verbally. Reason • Task 2: • Participants were faster to respond by pointing than they were to respond verbally. Reason Return
Evidence for Dual-Coding • It requires the formation of a visual image of an F. • The visual image probably has at least some picture-like qualities (spatial or visual), so a spatial or visually guided response (pointing) would be interfered with to a greater extend than would a verbal response. • The visual image is more disruptive of, and disrupted by, another spatial or visual type of task (pointing) than by a verbal kind of task (talking). Return
Evidence for Dual-Coding • Holding a sentence in memory (a verbal task) is easier to do with a concurrent visual/spatial task (such as pointing) than with another verbal task. Return
Evidence for Dual-Coding • Conclusion • Images and words use different kinds of internal codes (dual-coding hypothesis) • Visual images and words are separate codes Try it • Visual imagery interferes with other visual tasks • Verbal tasks interfere with other verbal tasks • Visual imagery does not interfere with verbal tasks Return
Which of the following tasks is (are) the hardest one(s)? • Imagine an elephant and at the same time try to draw a house. • Imagine the definition of “elephant” and at the same time write down a definition of short-term memory. • - Draw an elephant and at the same time provide a definition of short-term memory. Return
The Relational-Organizational Hypothesis • Bower (1970b) • The relational-organizational hypothesis • An alternative to the dual-coding hypothesis • Imagery improved memory by producing more associations between the items to be recalled, rather than being richer than verbal labels • Individuals create a number of links or hooks between the information to remember and other information in paired-associates learning. Home Continue…
The Relational-Organizational Hypothesis • Imagery facilitates the creation of a greater number of hooks that link the two to-be-remembered pieces of information • Bower (1970b) provided evidence to distinguish between the dual coding and the relational-organizational hypothesis Evidence
Evidence for relational-organizational hypothesis • Three groups of participants with different instructions for a paired-associates learning task • G1: to rehearse aloud • G2: to construct two images that did not interact and were “separated in imaginal space”see here • G3: to construct an interactive scene of the two words in a pair see here Continue…
Piano vs. Cigar Return
Dog vs. Bathtub Return
Evidence for relational-organizational hypothesis • Results • All participants recognized about 85% of the previously seen words, however, • G1: recalled 30% of the paired associates • G2: recalled 27% of the paired associates • G3: recalled 53% of the paired associates Interpretations
Evidence for relational-organizational hypothesis • If Dual-Coding hypothesis is correct • G2 = G3 • Imagery simply led to more elaborated coding of the paired associates • However • G2 < G3 • It is not imagery per se that helps memory • Rather, it is the way in which imagery is used Continue…
Evidence for relational-organizational hypothesis • Interacting images presumably create or suggest more links between the target information and other information, making the target information easier to retrieve • Evidence support for relational-organizational hypothesis Home
Empirical Investigations of Imagery • Mental Rotation of Images • Shepard & Metzler (1971) » • Cooper & Shepard (1973) » • Images Scanning • Functional-equivalence hypothesis » • Image Scaling » • Image Scanning » Home
Mental Rotation of Images • Shepard & Metzler (1971) • They showed participants perspectives line drawings of three dimensional objects. • Participants were presented two drawings • The drawings depicted the same object but with one rotated by some degree. See here • Rotation was in a picture plane • Rotation was in depth • The drawings depicted mirror-image reversals • The objects were similar but not identical. See here • The mirror images were also sometimes rotated. Findings
Mental Rotation of Images Return
Mental Rotation of Images Return
Mental Rotation of Images Return
Mental Rotation of Images • The amount of time it took participants to decide if the two drawings depicted the same object or a mirror-image reversal was directly proportional to the angle of rotation between the drawings. See Figure Here
Mental Rotation of Images 5 MeanRT (Sec) 0 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 Angle of rotation (degree) Return
Mental Rotation of Images • Changes in manipulations • Materials • Rotation of letters • Procedure • Participants given a cue showing the orientation to which the test stimulus would be rotated, before the test stimulus appeared Results
Mental Rotation of Images Result
Mental Rotation of Images • Participants’ performances were the same for all angles of rotation if the cues were presented early enough • 1000 msec before the test stimulus appeared • Participants were able mentally to rotate their images either clockwise or counterclockwise, depending on which direction led to a lesser angle. Home More questions
Mental Rotation of Images • Are participants in these experiments mentally rotating the whole stimulus, or are they looking only at certain parts? • Lynn Cooper (1975) • Used irregular polygons as materials ▶