TRESTLE: A Model of Concept Formation in Structured Domains
Advances in Cognitive Systems 4 (2016) 131-150 The literature on concept formation has demonstrated that humans are capable of learning concepts incrementally, with a variety of attribute types, and in both supervised and unsupervised settings. Many models of concept formation focus on a subset of t...
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Zusammenfassung: | Advances in Cognitive Systems 4 (2016) 131-150 The literature on concept formation has demonstrated that humans are capable
of learning concepts incrementally, with a variety of attribute types, and in
both supervised and unsupervised settings. Many models of concept formation
focus on a subset of these characteristics, but none account for all of them.
In this paper, we present TRESTLE, an incremental account of probabilistic
concept formation in structured domains that unifies prior concept learning
models. TRESTLE works by creating a hierarchical categorization tree that can
be used to predict missing attribute values and cluster sets of examples into
conceptually meaningful groups. It updates its knowledge by partially matching
novel structures and sorting them into its categorization tree. Finally, the
system supports mixed-data representations, including nominal, numeric,
relational, and component attributes. We evaluate TRESTLE's performance on a
supervised learning task and an unsupervised clustering task. For both tasks,
we compare it to a nonincremental model and to human participants. We find that
this new categorization model is competitive with the nonincremental approach
and more closely approximates human behavior on both tasks. These results serve
as an initial demonstration of TRESTLE's capabilities and show that, by taking
key characteristics of human learning into account, it can better model
behavior than approaches that ignore them. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2410.10588 |