Systematicity as a selection constraint in analogical mapping (1991)
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| Venue: | Cognitive Science |
| Citations: | 44 - 11 self |
BibTeX
@ARTICLE{Clement91systematicityas,
author = {Catherine A Clement and Dedre Gentner},
title = {Systematicity as a selection constraint in analogical mapping},
journal = {Cognitive Science},
year = {1991},
volume = {15},
pages = {89--132}
}
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Abstract
Analogy is often viewed as a partial similarity match between domains. But not all partial similarities qualify as analogy: There must be some selection of which commonalities count. Three experiments tested o particular selection constraint in anological mapping, namely, systemoticity. That is, we tested whether a given predicate is more likely to figure in the interpretation of and prediction from on analogy if the predicate participates in a common system of relations. In Experiment 1, subjects judged two matches to be included in on analogy: an isolated match, and a match embedded in. a larger matching system. Subjects preferred the embedded match. In Experiments 2 and 3, subjects mode analogical predictions about a target domain. Subjects predicted information that followed from a causal system that matched the base domain, rather than information that was equally plausible, but that created an isolated match with the base. Results support Gentner's (1983, 1989) structure. mopping theory in that anological mopping concerns systems and not individual predicates, and that attention to shored systematic structure constrains the selection of information to include in an analogy.







