A connectionist account of asymmetric category learning in early infancy.

Young infants show unexplained asymmetries in the exclusivity of categories formed on the basis of visually presented stimuli. A connectionist model is described that shows similar exclusivity asymmetries when categorizing the same stimuli presented to infants. The asymmetries can be explained in terms of an associative learning mechanism, distributed internal representations, and the statistics of the feature distributions in the stimuli. The model was used to explore the robustness of this asymmetry. The model predicts that the asymmetry will persist when a category is acquired in the presence of mixed category exemplars. An experiment with 3-4-month-olds showed that asymmetric exclusivity persisted in the presence of mixed-exemplar familiarization, thereby confirming the model's prediction.

[1]  E. N. Solokov Perception and the conditioned reflex , 1963 .

[2]  R. L. Fantz Visual Experience in Infants: Decreased Attention to Familiar Patterns Relative to Novel Ones , 1964, Science.

[3]  David Elkind,et al.  Studies in Cognitive Development: Essays in Honour of Jean Piaget , 1969 .

[4]  J. Fagan Memory in the infant. , 1970, Journal of experimental child psychology.

[5]  Leslie B. Cohen,et al.  A Two Process Model of Infant Visual Attention. , 1972 .

[6]  J. Fagan,et al.  Infants' delayed recognition memory and forgetting. , 1973, Journal of experimental child psychology.

[7]  Daniel F. Chambliss,et al.  The relative contributions of common and distinctive information on the abstraction from ill-defined categories , 1975 .

[8]  J. Deloache Rate of habituation and visual memory in infants. , 1976, Child development.

[9]  C. Dodds,et al.  The interfering effect of distracting stimuli on the infant's memory. , 1977, Child development.

[10]  An examination of interference effects in infants' memory for faces. , 1977 .

[11]  J. Deloache,et al.  An examination of interference effects in infants' memory for faces. , 1977, Child development.

[12]  J. Fagan Infant recognition memory: studies in forgetting. , 1977, Child development.

[13]  G. Pugnetti,et al.  Simon and Schuster's guide to dogs , 1980 .

[14]  B. Fischhoff,et al.  Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Learning and Memory , 1980 .

[15]  C. Rovee-Collier,et al.  Advances in infancy research , 1981 .

[16]  B. Younger The segregation of items into categories by ten-month-old infants. , 1985, Child development.

[17]  Geoffrey E. Hinton,et al.  A Learning Algorithm for Boltzmann Machines , 1985, Cogn. Sci..

[18]  Barbara A. Younger,et al.  Developmental change in infants' perception of correlations among attributes. , 1986, Child development.

[19]  Paul C. Quinn,et al.  The categorical representation of visual pattern information by young infants , 1987, Cognition.

[20]  H. Hayne,et al.  Categorization and memory retrieval by three-month-olds. , 1987, Child development.

[21]  N. Sharkey,et al.  Advances in cognitive science , 1988 .

[22]  Garrison W. Cottrell,et al.  Image compression by back-propagation: An example of extensional programming , 1988 .

[23]  Observer accuracy and observer agreement in the measurement of visual fixation with fixed-trial procedures , 1989 .

[24]  James L. McClelland,et al.  A distributed, developmental model of word recognition and naming. , 1989, Psychological review.

[25]  S. Fahlman Fast-learning variations on back propagation: an empirical study. , 1989 .

[26]  Geoffrey E. Hinton,et al.  Proceedings of the 1988 Connectionist Models Summer School , 1989 .

[27]  Anders Krogh,et al.  Introduction to the theory of neural computation , 1994, The advanced book program.

[28]  Robert M. French,et al.  Semi-distributed Representations and Catastrophic Forgetting in Connectionist Networks , 1992 .

[29]  K. Plunkett,et al.  Connectionism and developmental theory , 1992 .

[30]  P. D. Eimas,et al.  Evidence for Representations of Perceptually Similar Natural Categories by 3-Month-Old and 4-Month-Old Infants , 1993, Perception.

[31]  P. D. Eimas,et al.  Studies on the formation of perceptually based basic-level categories in young infants. , 1994, Child development.

[32]  P D Eimas,et al.  Development of exclusivity in perceptually based categories of young infants. , 1994, Journal of experimental child psychology.

[33]  J. Jacobson,et al.  Evidence of observer reliability for the Fagan Test of Infant Intelligence (FTII) , 1994 .

[34]  A. Slater,et al.  Visual perception and memory at birth , 1995 .

[35]  Leslie S. Smith,et al.  Neural Computation and Psychology , 1995, Workshops in Computing.

[36]  Jodie M. Plumert,et al.  Evidence for Task-Dependent Categorization in Infancy , 1996 .

[37]  T. Shultz,et al.  Generative connectionist networks and constructivist cognitive development , 1996 .

[38]  J. Elman,et al.  Rethinking Innateness: A Connectionist Perspective on Development , 1996 .

[39]  P D Eimas,et al.  Perceptual cues that permit categorical differentiation of animal species by infants. , 1996, Journal of experimental child psychology.

[40]  James L. McClelland,et al.  Rethinking infant knowledge: toward an adaptive process account of successes and failures in object permanence tasks. , 1997, Psychological review.

[41]  Robert M. French,et al.  A Connectionist Account of Interference Effects in Early Infant Memory and Categorization , 1997 .

[42]  M. Johnson,et al.  The emergence of perceptual category representations in young infants: a connectionist analysis. , 1997, Journal of experimental child psychology.

[43]  P Langley,et al.  Proceedings of the 19th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society , 1997 .

[44]  Kim Plunkett,et al.  Exercises in rethinking innateness , 1997 .

[45]  A. Slater Perceptual Development: Visual, Auditory, and Speech Perception in Infancy. Studies in Developmental Psychology. , 2000 .

[46]  Edmund T. Rolls,et al.  Introduction to Connectionist Modelling of Cognitive Processes , 1998 .

[47]  R. French Catastrophic forgetting in connectionist networks , 1999, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.

[48]  Barbara A. Younger,et al.  Parsing Items into Separate Categories: Developmental Change in Infant Categorization. , 1999 .

[49]  Lisa M. Oakes,et al.  Making Sense of Infant Categorization: Stable Processes and Changing Representations☆☆☆ , 1999 .

[50]  E. Hartmann Perceptual Development: Visual, Auditory, and Speech Perception in Infancy , 1999 .

[51]  D. Mareschal,et al.  A computational and neuropsychological account of object‐oriented behaviours in infancy , 1999 .

[52]  Ronald A. Rensink,et al.  Competition for consciousness among visual events: the psychophysics of reentrant visual processes. , 2000, Journal of experimental psychology. General.

[53]  Denis Mareschal,et al.  Mechanisms of Categorization in Infancy. , 2000, Infancy : the official journal of the International Society on Infant Studies.

[54]  Carolyn Rovee-Collier,et al.  Progress in infancy research , 2000 .

[55]  D. Mareschal,et al.  Modeling Infant Speech Sound Discrimination Using Simple Associative Networks. , 2001, Infancy : the official journal of the International Society on Infant Studies.