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Dissociations between rule-based and information-integration categorization are not caused by differences in task difficulty

Authors :
J. David Smith
Luke A. Rosedahl
F. Gregory Ashby
Source :
Mem Cognit
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2019.

Abstract

In rule-based (RB) category-learning tasks, the optimal strategy is a simple explicit rule, whereas in information-integration (II) tasks, the optimal strategy is impossible to describe verbally. Many studies have reported qualitative dissociations between training and performance in RB and II tasks. Virtually all of these studies were testing predictions of the dual-systems model of category learning called COVIS. The most prominent alternative account to COVIS is that humans have one learning system that is used in all tasks, and that the observed dissociations occur because the II task is more difficult than the RB task. This article describes the first attempt to test this difficulty hypothesis against anything more than a single set of data. First, two novel predictions are derived that discriminate between the difficulty and multiple-systems hypotheses. Next, these predictions are tested against a wide variety of published categorization data. Overall, the results overwhelmingly reject the difficulty hypothesis and instead strongly favor the multiple-systems account of the many RB versus II dissociations.

Details

ISSN :
15325946 and 0090502X
Volume :
48
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Memory & Cognition
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....62dd1cc435c8effaa7f87c8ec3a14920