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The Impact of Statistical Distributions of Colours on Colour Category Acquisition

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Authors

Belpaeme, Tony; Bleys, Joris

Issue Date
2009
Publisher
Institute for Cognitive Science, Seoul National University
Citation
Journal of Cognitive Science, Vol.10 No.1, pp. 1-20
Keywords
colour categorizationcomputational modellingchromatic environmentcategory acquisition
Abstract
Different accounts have been proposed to explain the remarkable crosscultural
similarities of human colour categories. One of these accounts, known
as empiricism, places the burden of the explanation on the statistical distribution
of colours in the shared environment we live in. It has been claimed that this
factor is essential for the nature of human colour categories and that it is even
capable to account for the evolution of colour categories as observed in human
cultures. We present a computational model to verify this hypothesis, which
improves on previous work by Yendrikhovskij (2001a). Our results suggest that
the chromatic environment does not fully explain the nature of human colour
categories, however the distribution of colours in the environment does bias the
acquisition of colour categories. We suggest how culture and specifically
language might account for the observed nature of human colour categories.
ISSN
1598-2327
Language
English
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/70783
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