MindCORE Seminar: Dedre Gentner

Apr

2

4:00pm

MindCORE Seminar: Dedre Gentner

By MindCORE

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Speaker: Dedre Gentner, Department of Psychology, Northwestern University
Moderated by: John McCoy, Department of Marketing, University of Pennsylvania
Structure-mapping in Human Learning
Across species, humans are uniquely able to acquire deep relational systems of the kind needed for mathematics, science, and human language. Analogical comparison processes are a major contributor to this ability. Analogical comparison engages a structure-mapping process (Gentner, 1983) that fosters learning in at least three ways: first, it highlights common relational systems and thereby promotes abstraction; second, it promotes inferences from known situations to less familiar situations; and, third, it reveals potentially important differences between examples. In short, structure-mapping is a domain-general learning process by which abstract, portable knowledge can arise from experience. It is operative from early infancy on, and is critical to the rapid learning we see in human children.
Although structure-mapping processes are present pre-linguistically, their scope is greatly amplified by language. Analogical processes are instrumental in learning relational language, and the reverse is also true: relational language acts to preserve relational abstractions and render them accessible for future learning and reasoning.
Learn more about MindCORE--Penn's hub for the integrative study of the mind -- at https://mindcore.sas.upenn.edu/
Twitter: @PennMindCORE

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