A slightly different approach but could you also look at the types of errors patients make on picture naming tasks? It would be interesting to see the potential overlap.
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Yes!!
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Replying to @TimKietzmann @GraceRice44 and
FWIW: a bit old but I haven't found any better conceptual papers on what seem important distinctions in relating features to a concept. Should tie well with (Neuro)Cog Development. Sloman,
@ProfData, & Ahn: Feature Centrality and Conceptual Coherencehttps://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1207/s15516709cog2202_2 …1 reply 0 retweets 4 likes -
Replying to @marcolin91 @TimKietzmann and
I never thought deeply about the connection between this work and conceptual development, but there might be parallels with children shifting to focusing on internal properties over surface appearance over development.
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Replying to @ProfData @TimKietzmann and
Relieved you think so too! Is also suspect a link with the discussion yesterday; a kind of trajectory in the priorities of how the Alg.Repr space should improve, parallel with its changes. An "as if" Comp.Rep of being robust, flexible, systematic, for the sake of the agent (dev)?
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Replying to @marcolin91 @TimKietzmann and
Totally self-promotional and you're welcome to ignore, but maybe of interest that the conceptual centrality algorithm was PageRank before PageRank existed, just for web of human concepts instead of WWW,http://bradlove.org/blog/cogsci-page-rank …
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Replying to @ProfData @TimKietzmann and
That last sentence definitely was a step further than the average self promotion :) The point of undiscovered links of value resonated, prob again bc of the impact of the algorithmic bridge paper. To clarify I'm not exaggerating/sucking up, exhibit A:https://skillsmatter.com/skillscasts/11121-shared-principles-and-concepts-for-the-artificial-and-human-in-pursuit-of-a-common-language-for-intelligence …
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Replying to @marcolin91 @TimKietzmann and
Cool! I'll check out your video when i wind down tonight.
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Replying to @ProfData @TimKietzmann and
That's very kind! Note the audience was a group of engineers and data scientists, and my focus was providing a conceptual basis that may provide a lens or language for them to explore CogNeuro, so its not very academic. But if you do watch it, would love to hear your thoughts!
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Replying to @marcolin91 @ProfData and
I don't wanna break this thread — to circle back to what
@GraceRice44 said. Patients, especially ones with semantic impairments, IIRC show an effect of AoA (age of acquisition). Meaning earlier things are retained longer as their impairments worsen.2 replies 0 retweets 1 like
And IIRC some call this a reverse developmental trajectory, so yeah, definitely something to look into but I hear it's even harder to get data from patients than from children...
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