Results 271 to 280 of about 305,262 (317)

Re-Categorization: Restructuring In Categorization

open access: yes, 2009
Cosejo, David   +2 more
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On the Virtue of Categoricity

Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic, 2021
zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
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TO COGNIZE IS TO CATEGORIZE: COGNITION IS CATEGORIZATION [PDF]

open access: possible, 2005
We organisms are sensorimotor systems. The things in the world come in contact with our sensory surfaces, and we interact with them based on what that sensorimotor contact “affords”. All of our categories consist in ways we behave differently toward different kinds of things -- things we do or don’t eat, mate-with, or flee-from, or the things that we ...
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Infant categorization

WIREs Cognitive Science, 2010
AbstractIn this article, we review the principal findings on infant categorization from the last 30 years. The review focuses on behaviorally based experiments with visual preference, habituation, object examining, sequential touching, and inductive generalization procedures. We propose that although this research has helped to elucidate the ‘what’ and
David H, Rakison, Yevdokiya, Yermolayeva
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Language and Categorization

2021
Abstract This chapter is focussed on linguistic bias in intergroup relations. It is based on the linguistic intergroup bias model, according to which people use different words for describing people and their behaviour on the basis of group membership.
Hichy Z., Di Marco G.
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Categorical Data [PDF]

open access: possible, 2008
A very brief survey of regression for categorical data. Categorical outcome (or discrete outcome or qualitative response) regression models are models for a discrete dependent variable recording in which of two or more categories an outcome of interest lies.
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Categorical counting

Behavioural Processes, 2010
Pigeons pecked on three keys, responses to one of which could be reinforced after a few pecks, to a second key after a somewhat larger number of pecks, and to a third key after the maximum pecking requirement. The values of the pecking requirements and the proportion of trials ending with reinforcement were varied.
J Gregor, Fetterman, P Richard, Killeen
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Social Categorization

2015
Categorization is a process by which people make sense of things by working out similarities and differences. Social categorization is especially important because it explains the way that people make sense of other people and themselves. Studying social categorization helps us to understand the way that people perceive groups and form impressions of ...
McGarty, Craig   +2 more
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