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Similarity and structured representation in human and nonhuman apes

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-01-16, 13:27 authored by Carl J Hodgetts, James OE Close, Ulrike Hahn
How we judge the similarity between objects in the world is connected ultimately to how we represent those objects. It has been argued extensively that object representations in humans are 'structured' in nature, meaning that both individual features and the relations between them can influence similarity. In contrast, popular models within comparative psychology assume that nonhuman species appreciate only surface-level, featural similarities. By applying psychological models of structural and featural similarity (from conjunctive feature models to Tversky's Contrast Model) to visual similarity judgements from adult humans, chimpanzees, and gorillas, we demonstrate a cross-species sensitivity to complex structural information, particularly for stimuli that combine colour and shape. These results shed new light on the representational complexity of nonhuman apes, and the fundamental limits of featural coding in explaining object representation and similarity, which emerge strikingly across both human and nonhuman species.

History

Refereed

  • Yes

Volume

236

Publication title

Cognition

ISSN

0010-0277

Publisher

Elsevier BV

Location

Netherlands

File version

  • Published version

Language

  • eng

Item sub-type

Article, Journal

Media of output

Print-Electronic

Affiliated with

  • School of Psychology and Sport Science Outputs