Dedre Gentner

Alice Gabrielle Twight Professor of Psychology & Education


Curriculum vitae



(847)467-1272


Department of Psychology

Northwestern University



Structure Mapping in Visual Comparison: Embodied Correspondence Lines?


Journal article


Bryan J. Matlen, D. Gentner, S. Franconeri
Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, 2014

Semantic Scholar DBLP
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Cite

APA   Click to copy
Matlen, B. J., Gentner, D., & Franconeri, S. (2014). Structure Mapping in Visual Comparison: Embodied Correspondence Lines? Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Matlen, Bryan J., D. Gentner, and S. Franconeri. “Structure Mapping in Visual Comparison: Embodied Correspondence Lines?” Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society (2014).


MLA   Click to copy
Matlen, Bryan J., et al. “Structure Mapping in Visual Comparison: Embodied Correspondence Lines?” Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, 2014.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{bryan2014a,
  title = {Structure Mapping in Visual Comparison: Embodied Correspondence Lines?},
  year = {2014},
  journal = {Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society},
  author = {Matlen, Bryan J. and Gentner, D. and Franconeri, S.}
}

Abstract

Structure Mapping in Visual Comparison: Embodied Correspondence Lines? Bryan J. Matlen ([email protected]) Department of Psychology, 633 Clark Street Evanston, IL 60208 USA Dedre Gentner ([email protected]) Department of Psychology, 633 Clark Street Evanston, IL 60208 USA Steven Franconeri ([email protected]) Department of Psychology, 633 Clark Street Evanston, IL 60208 USA Structure-mapping theory asserts that analogical comparison involves a process of structural alignment based on finding common relational structure (Gentner, 1983). During this process, correspondences are established between the aligned components of the analogs—both relations and objects. In the present experiment, we show that this alignment process is strikingly more efficient when the correspondence lines between matching components are maximally direct—that is, when they run perpendicular to the principal axes of the two structures. When asked to make same/different judgments across two shape sequences (e.g., circle-square-circle vs. circle-square-square), judgments are faster when horizontal sequences are placed vertically (one on top of another), than horizontally (one next to the other), and vice versa. Perpendicular arrangement is still more efficient even when correspondence lines do not cross other objects, as revealed by an advantage over diagonal arrangement. These findings suggest an embodied aspect for structural alignment between visual images.


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