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Recoding can lead to inaccessible structures, but avoids capacity limitations

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 March 1997

Graeme S. Halford
Affiliation:
Psychology Department, University of Queensland, 4072 Queensland, Australiagsh@psy.uq.oz.au
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Abstract

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The distinction between uninformed learning (type-1) and learning based on recoding using prior information (type-2) helps to clarify some long-standing psychological problems, including misunderstanding of mathematics by children, the need for active construction of concepts in cognitive development, and the difficulty of configural learning tasks. However, an alternative to recoding some type-2 tasks is to represent the input as separate dimensions, which are processed jointly. This preserves the original structure, but is subject to processing capacity limitations.

Type
Open Peer Commentary
Copyright
© 1997 Cambridge University Press