The Representation of Knowledge

How is our information about the world (semantic information) stored?

In particular, do we store information in a picture format, a word format, some abstract format, or a combination?


The Debate

Unitary Content Hypothesis

Claims that all information in semantic memory is stored in terms of an amodal, abstract representation. Percepts of a concept from different sensory modalities activate the same set of information in semantic memory. This hypothesis is instantiated in the Propositional Hypothesis.

Propositional hypothesis:

Posits that semantic information is stored in an abstract, amodal (i.e. non-perceptual based) format called a proposition.
 
 

A proposition encapsulates the relationship between two concepts, such as Color[Stop sign, Red].

The feeling of having mental imagery is simply an emergent property of processing propositions referring to visual properties.


Multiple semantics hypothesis

In general, claims that semantic memory is divided into modality-specific subsystems that store information related to their particular modality.

Information perceived in a particular sensory modality has direct access to that modality’s semantic subsystem, and indirect access to the other subsystems.

The best known example of this theory is Dual-code theory.

Dual-code theory:

Puts forth the proposition that we store information in two types of formats, or codes:


 
 


The Data

Mental Imagery: Do we or don’t we have the ability to manipulate actual pictures in our minds?

Evidence for:

More evidence in favor of mental imagery:


Evidence against mental imagery:


Other evidence

A range of findings purport to address which of these classes of models is the right one:


Cog Neuro Evidence

Double dissociation: If one thinks that there are two different mechanisms responsible for two different phenomena, one must find patients that have selective impairments at both phenomena.

For multiple semantics:

Example: Beauvois’ (1982) color aphasic.

More cog neuro evidence

Cog neuro evidence in favor of the Unitary content hypotheses: