Commonalities and differences in similarity comparisons.

A B Markman, D Gentner
Author Information
  1. A B Markman: Department of Psychology, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027, USA. markman@psych.columbia.edu

Abstract

Similarity is a central component of many cognitive processes. Current research suggests that similarity is well characterized as a comparison of structured representations. This process yields commonalities, differences related to the commonalities (alignable differences), and differences not related to the commonalities (nonalignable differences). In the first study, further evidence for this tripartite distinction is provided in a commonality and difference listing study involving pairs of pictures. This study indicates that alignable differences rather than nonalignable differences are central to the comparison process by virtue of their connection to the commonalities. The second study further demonstrates that alignable differences count more against the similarity of a pair than do nonalignable differences. We end by discussing implications of the distinction between alignable and nonalignable differences for other cognitive processes involving comparisons.

References

  1. Cogn Psychol. 1991 Apr;23(2):222-62 [PMID: 2055001]
  2. Mem Cognit. 1987 Jul;15(4):332-40 [PMID: 3670053]
  3. J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn. 1988 Jul;14(3):510-20 [PMID: 2969945]
  4. Psychon Bull Rev. 1995 Mar;2(1):105-12 [PMID: 24203592]
  5. Cognition. 1990 Jan;34(1):57-83 [PMID: 1689233]

MeSH Term

Adult
Association Learning
Attention
Discrimination Learning
Female
Humans
Male
Pattern Recognition, Visual
Problem Solving

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0differencescommonalitiesalignablenonalignablestudysimilaritycentralcognitiveprocessescomparisonprocessrelateddistinctioninvolvingcomparisonsSimilaritycomponentmanyCurrentresearchsuggestswellcharacterizedstructuredrepresentationsyieldsfirstevidencetripartiteprovidedcommonalitydifferencelistingpairspicturesindicatesrathervirtueconnectionseconddemonstratescountpairenddiscussingimplicationsCommonalities

Similar Articles

Cited By