(...) we viewed natural semantic categories as networks of overlapping attributes; the basic hypothesis was that members of a category come to be viewed as prototypical of the category as a whole in proportion to the extent to which they bear a family... The Big Book of Concepts - Page 32by Gregory Murphy - 2004 - 568 pagesLimited preview - About this book
| Nada Lavrač, Stefan Wrobel - Computers - 1995 - 388 pages
...prototypicality may serve as a measure of membership in a concept. She writes: "The basic hypothesis was that members of a category come to be viewed as prototypical of the category as a whole in proportion to the ex tent that they bear a family resemblance to (have attributes which overlap those of other members... | |
| José Javier Martos Ramos - Language Arts & Disciplines - 2006 - 208 pages
...familia al respecto: "(...) members of a category come to be viewed as prototy pical of the category as whole in proportion to the extent to which they bear a family resemblance to (...) other members of 1he category. Conversely. items viewed as most prototypical of one category... | |
| |