Does incidental training increase the prevalence of overall similarity classification? A re-examination of kemler Nelson (1984)

Angus Inkster, Fraser Milton, Andy J. Wills. Does incidental training increase the prevalence of overall similarity classification? A re-examination of kemler Nelson (1984). In Paul Bello, Marcello Guarini, Marjorie McShane, Brian Scassellati, editors, Proceedings of the 36th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, CogSci 2014, Quebec City, Canada, July 23-26, 2014. cognitivesciencesociety.org, 2014. [doi]

@inproceedings{InksterMW14,
  title = {Does incidental training increase the prevalence of overall similarity classification? A re-examination of kemler Nelson (1984)},
  author = {Angus Inkster and Fraser Milton and Andy J. Wills},
  year = {2014},
  url = {https://mindmodeling.org/cogsci2014/papers/120/},
  researchr = {https://researchr.org/publication/InksterMW14},
  cites = {0},
  citedby = {0},
  booktitle = {Proceedings of the 36th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, CogSci 2014, Quebec City, Canada, July 23-26, 2014},
  editor = {Paul Bello and Marcello Guarini and Marjorie McShane and Brian Scassellati},
  publisher = {cognitivesciencesociety.org},
  isbn = {978-0-9911967-0-8},
}