Concept Formation
Concept Formation
Concept Formation
Concept formation
Purpose
To study the process of concept formation by prompting method using a concept formation test
based on Hanfmann and Kasanin test.
Introduction
Concepts are the categorization of objects, events, or people that share common
properties. By using concepts, we are able to organize complex notions into simpler, and
therefore more easily usable forms.
Concept formation, is defined by Bruner, Goodnow, & Austin (1967) as "the search
for and listing of attributes that can be used to distinguish exemplars from non exemplars of
various categories".
While research on learning in animals has been used by some psychologists as
evidence that primates at least, if not other species, are capable of concept formation, and
computers have been programmed to process information by using and developing
classification rules, these accomplishments are all relatively impoverished compared to
human concept formation. For human beings, concept formation is essential to our life in the
complex world of interactions with not only objects but also people and abstract ideas.
Child developmentalists, such as Jean Piaget and Lev Vygotsky, have researched the
way children form their own concepts through experience, assimilate existing concepts such
as cultural values, norms, and beliefs from adults, and further create and develop their own
concepts as they mature toward adulthood. Cognitive psychologists, like Eleanor Rosch,
have suggested that rather than a strictly logico-mathematical form of classification people
develop natural categories that are graded, involving typical examples.
Concepts are (a) acquired dispositions to recognize perceived objects as being of this
kind or of that kind, and at the same time (b) to understand what this kind or that kind of
object is like, and consequently (c) to perceive a number of perceived particulars as being the
same in kind and to discriminate between them and other sensible particulars that are
different in kind.
Experiments in animal learning generally involve discrimination between stimuli
with different characteristics, say a red object rather than ones of other colors, a lightened
pathway over a darkened one, the larger of two objects, or even the different one from a
group. Such studies have suggested to some psychologists that animals are capable of a
primitive level of concept formation.
Concepts are acquired dispositions to understand what certain kinds of objects are like both
(a) when the objects, though perceptible, are not actually perceived, and (b) also when they
are not perceptible at all, as is the case with all the conceptual constructs we employ in
physics, mathematics, and metaphysics.
Images, concepts, and symbols are the basic units of thought. Images are picture-like
mental representations. Seeing something in our "mind's eye" is similar to seeing real objects.
Information from the eyes normally activates the brain's primary visual area, creating an
image. Other brain areas help us recognize the image by relating it to store knowledge. When
we form a mental image, the system works in reverse. Brain areas where memories are stored
send signals back to the visual cortex, where once again, an image is created. For example, if
we visualize a friend's face, the area of our brain that specializes in perceiving faces will
become more active.
Though visual imagery is dominant in our everyday life, images do not have to be
only visual. They can also be auditory and even olfactory (involving the sense of smell).
According to the data of cognitive psychology, ninety-seven percent of people have visual
images, ninety-two percent have auditory images, and fifty percent have imagery for
movements, touch, and smell.
Types of Concepts
Conjunctive concepts are defined by the presence of at least two features, which
means that a conjunctive concept is a class of objects that have two or more common
features.
Rational concept is defined by the relationship between the features of an object or
between an object and its surroundings. This means that rational concepts are based on how
an object relates to something else, or how its features relate to one another.
Disjunctive concepts are either/or they have at least one of several possible features.
Disjunctive concepts are defined by the presence of at least one of several possible features.
Types of Concept Formation
Direct Experience is the first step of concept formation, in which the learner
develops concept through direct experience with the particular objects/ person/ events. It is
developed through the early childhood onwards. For example, the concept about cows.
Indirect Experience is where the learner develops the concept through pictures,
reading descriptions, photos and hearing from others. For example, the concept of kangaroos.
Faulty concepts are the concepts or ideas we have about the object, persons or events,
are not always adequate and accurate. Small children have so many concepts that are quite
erroneous and inadequate. For example, one anxiety over the crossing of his way by a cat or
one’s feelings of hatred towards the person belonging to the other caste or religion is the
result of faulty concepts. Faulty concepts should not be allowed to develop in children.
Theories of concepts and concept formation are those which try to understand and
explain the principles and ways concepts are formed and how the thinking process as a whole
develops.
The classical Aristotelian view claims that categories are discrete entities
characterized by a set of properties which are shared by their members. These are
assumed to establish the conditions which are both necessary and sufficient to capture
meaning.
Ayn Rand defines similarity as: "the relationship between two or more existents
which possess the same characteristic(s), but in different measure or degree."
Similarity is a matter of measurement.
The prototype view of concept learning holds that people abstract out the
central tendency (or prototype) of the examples experienced and use this as a basis
for their categorization decisions.
The prototype view of concept learning holds that people categorize based on
one or more central examples of a given category followed by a penumbra of
decreasingly typical examples. This implies that people do not categorize based on a
list of things that all correspond to a definition, but rather on a hierarchical inventory
based on semantic similarity to the central example(s).
Hypotheses:
1. Time Taken in the test progressively decreases as the combined concept of the size and height
is formed.
2. Number of errors committed in sorting the blocks progressively decreases as the combined
concept of size and height is formed.
Method
Materials required: the concept formation test which consists of 22 blocks differing in colour,
height, size and shape; writing materials and data sheet.
Subject details:
Name: JJ
Age: 18
Gender: Female
Procedure:
The subject is seated comfortably. The experimenter takes out all the twenty- two blocks
from the box and keeps them on the table in a mixed order in front of the subject.
The experimenter should take care to see that the numbers printed below each block is
not visible to the subject. He should have a stopwatch and a pencil to note the time and errors on
the data sheet. Instructions are given to the subject to select the blocks, which form a set with the
sample block shown by the experimenter.
The subject selects the block and the experimenter sees the number written below. If it is
the right block, he allows the subject to select the next block, but if it is a wrong block, the
experimenter indicates the error and allows the subject to go on with the experiment. If the
subject selects the wrong block, it is an error and the experimenter notes it down. The subject is
thus prompted whenever he/she makes a mistake. This procedure is followed in an effort to get
the subject to learn the proper grouping of each block the time taken to complete the set and
errors committed are noted down.
When the subject succeeds in selecting all the blocks of a group, the experimenter mixes
these blocks with the remaining blocks and shows a sample block of another group, say set 3,
and asks the subject to find those blocks which fall in this group, using the same procedure as the
last test. The same procedure is followed by the experimenter for the remaining two groups.
Successful sorting of all the four groups constitutes one trial. In the second trial, the order
of presentation of the set is changed. The following counter balancing order is adopted.
Trial 1: set 1, 3, 2, 4
2: set 3, 2, 4, 1
3: set 2, 4, 1, 3
4: set 4, 1, 3, 2
5: set 1, 4, 3, 2
Precautions taken
1. The experimenter should make sure that the subject has understood the instructions.
2. The subject should easily understand and comprehend the content of the scale.
3. The subject must meet the requirements of age, language and educational qualifications
needed for the experiment.
Results:
Set 1 15 0
Set 3 20 0
Set 2 12 0
Set 4 17 1
Set 3 22 0
Set 2 26 0
Set 4 10 0
Set 1 10 0
TRAIL 3 TIME (S) NO. OF ERRORS
Set 2 15 0
Set 4 20 0
Set 1 13 0
Set 3 20 0
Set 4 20 0
Set 1 10 0
Set 3 10 0
Set 2 12 0
Interpretation
The time taken and the number of errors both progressively decrease as the subject
slowly starts forming the concept. Hence the hypotheses is correct.