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1.
Front Psychol ; 13: 774629, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35391988

ABSTRACT

A recent study has established that thinkers reliably engage in epistemic appraisals of concepts of natural categories. Here, five studies are reported which investigated the effects of different manipulations of category learning context on appraisal of the concepts learnt. It was predicted that dimensions of concept appraisal could be affected by manipulating either procedural factors (spacing of learning, perceptual fluency) or declarative factors (causal knowledge about categories). While known effects of these manipulations on metacognitive judgements such as category learning judgements and confidence at test were replicated, procedural factors had no reliable effects on the dimensions of concept appraisal. Effects of declarative manipulations on some forms of concept appraisal were observed.

2.
Cogn Sci ; 45(5): e12978, 2021 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34018241

ABSTRACT

This paper reports the first empirical investigation of the hypothesis that epistemic appraisals form part of the structure of concepts. To date, studies of concepts have focused on the way concepts encode properties of objects and the way those features are used in categorization and in other cognitive tasks. Philosophical considerations show the importance of also considering how a thinker assesses the epistemic value of beliefs and other cognitive resources and, in particular, concepts. We demonstrate that there are multiple, reliably judged, dimensions of epistemic appraisal of concepts. Four of these dimensions are accounted for by a common underlying factor capturing how well people believe they understand a concept. Further studies show how dimensions of concept appraisal relate to other aspects of concepts. First, they relate directly to the hierarchical organization of concepts, reflecting the increase in specificity from superordinate to basic and subordinate levels. Second, they predict inductive choices in category-based induction. Our results suggest that epistemic appraisals of concepts form a psychologically important yet previously overlooked aspect of the structure of concepts. These findings will be important in understanding why individuals sometimes abandon and replace certain concepts; why social groups do so, for example, during a "scientific revolution"; and how we can facilitate such changes when we engage in deliberate "conceptual engineering" for epistemic, social, and political purposes.

3.
Behav Brain Sci ; 42: e220, 2019 11 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31775917

ABSTRACT

Brette highlights a conceptual problem in contemporary neuroscience: Loose talk of "coding" sometimes leads to a conflation of the distinction between representing and merely detecting a property. The solution is to replace casual talk of "coding" with an explicit, demanding set of conditions for neural representation. Various theories of this general type can be found in the philosophical literature.


Subject(s)
Brain , Metaphor
4.
Conscious Cogn ; 47: 38-47, 2017 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27633525

ABSTRACT

In this paper I argue that the detection of emotional expressions is, in its early stages, informationally encapsulated. I clarify and defend such a view via the appeal to data from social perception on the visual processing of faces, bodies, facial and bodily expressions. Encapsulated social perception might exist alongside processes that are cognitively penetrated, and that have to do with recognition and categorization, and play a central evolutionary function in preparing early and rapid responses to the emotional stimuli.


Subject(s)
Emotions/physiology , Facial Expression , Social Perception , Visual Perception/physiology , Humans
5.
Top Cogn Sci ; 6(4): 632-46, 2014 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25155025

ABSTRACT

In philosophy, "singular thought" refers to our capacity to represent entities as individuals, rather than as possessors of properties. Philosophers who defend singularism argue that perception allows us to mentally latch onto objects and persons directly, without conceptualizing them as being of a certain sort. Singularists assume that singular thought forms a unified psychological kind, regardless of the nature of the individuals represented. Empirical findings on the special psychological role of persons as opposed to inanimates threaten singularism. They raise the possibility that tracking individuals specifically as persons might require conceptualizing them in certain ways, for example, as persons. In this paper, we take such a possibility seriously but ultimately reject it. Instead, we propose to revise a prominent singularist theory, the theory of mental files, in order to accommodate data on the psychological distinctiveness of persons: We advocate the postulation of perceptual person-files. Perceptual tracking via person-files is different from object-tracking but also from descriptive classification under the sortal concept PERSON.


Subject(s)
Recognition, Psychology/physiology , Thinking/physiology , Humans , Social Perception , Theory of Mind/physiology
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