The Spreading Activation Model
Collins
and Loftus (1975) developed the spreading activation model of semantic memory
as a more complex answer to the HNM/TLC's criticisms. It suggests that concepts
and nodes are linked together with different levels of conductivity. The more
often the two concepts are linked, the greater conductivity.
Collins
and Loftus assumed that semantic memory is organised on the basis of semantic
relatedness or semantic distance. Nodes that get consistently activated
together form stronger connections that make it easier to excite each other,
when you look at the network they show this by having shorter links between
nodes. The shorter the link, the closer the semantic relation, and so the
faster the brain will be at making the connection between the nodes.
Furthermore, the longer a concept is accessed, the larger the spread of
activation.
Spreading
activation is the idea that when a concept is accessed activation spreads out
from that node in all directions, as the node attempts to excite all the nodes
around it. The higher the conductivity the faster it spreads down that link.
Whenever a person thinks, hears or sees, a concept the appropriate node is
activated.
The
model uses the analogy of neurons: nodes have an activation threshold, and it
must be beat for it to fire.
The
principle of weak cognitive economy is basically a revised version of Collins
and Quillian's cognitive economy principle. Information is allowed to be stored
at a lower node in the hierarchy if the link has been explicit, even if already
stored at a higher level. If relations are not stored explicitly it is still
possible to infer them using hierarchical information.
Collins
and Loftus claim that there are different types of links including: -Class
membership (a cat is a mammal), -Subordinate (a cat has fur), -Prediction
(game-play-people) -Exclusion (a whale is not a fish).
The more
properties 2 concepts have in common, the greater number of links between them;
e.g. more typical birds will be heavily linked. Semantic relatedness defined as
aggregate of the criteralities of the links between them.
Collins
and Loftus suggest that connections made are not necessarily logical, rather
based on personal experience.
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