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254   Eleanor Rosch

                the attributes most representative of items inside and least representative of
                items outside the category.

                The Vertical Dimension of Categories: Basic-Level Objects

                In a programmatic series of experiments, we have attempted to argue that cat-
                egories within taxonomies of concrete objects are structured such that there is
                generally one level of abstraction at which the most basic category cuts can be
                made (Rosch et al. 1976a). By category is meant a number of objects that are
                considered equivalent. Categories are generally designated by names (e.g., dog,
                animal). A taxonomy is a system by which categories are related to one another
                by means of class inclusion. The greater the inclusiveness of a category within a
                taxonomy, the higher the level of abstraction. Each category within a taxonomy
                is entirely included within one other category (unless it is the highest level cat-
                egory) but is not exhaustive of that more inclusive category (see Kay 1971).
                Thus the term level of abstraction within a taxonomy refers to a particular level
                of inclusiveness. A familiar taxonomy is the Linnean system for the classifica-
                tion of animals.
                  Our claims concerning a basic level of abstraction can be formalized in terms
                of cue validity (Rosch et al. 1976a) or in terms of the set theoretic representation
                of similarity provided by Tversky (1977, and Tversky and Gati 1978). Cue va-
                lidity is a probabilistic concept; the validity of a given cue x as a predictor of a
                given category y (the conditional probability of y/x) increases as the frequency
                with which cue x is associated with category y increasesand decreasesasthe
                frequency with which cue x is associated with categories other than y increases
                (Beach 1964a, 1964b; Reed 1972). The cue validity of an entire category may be
                defined as the summation of the cue validities for that category of each of the
                attributes of the category. A category with high cue validity is, by definition,
                more differentiated from other categories than one of lower cue validity. The
                elegant formulization that Tversky (1978) provides is in terms of the variable
                ‘‘category resemblance,’’ which is defined as the weighted sum of the measures
                of all of the common features within a category minus the sum of the measures
                of all of the distinctive features. Distinctive features include those that belong
                to only some members of a given category as well as those belonging to con-
                trasting categories. Thus Tversky’s formalization does not weight the effect of
                contrast categories as much as does the cue validity formulation. Tversky sug-
                gests that two disjoint classes tend to be combined whenever the weight of the
                added common features exceeds the weight of the distinctive features.
                  A working assumption of the research on basic objects is that (1) in the per-
                ceived world, information-rich bundles of perceptual and functional attributes
                occur that form natural discontinuities, and that (2) basic cuts in categorization
                are made at these discontinuities. Suppose that basic objects (e.g., chair, car) are
                at the most inclusive level at which there are attributes common to all or most
                members of the category. Then both total cue validities and category resem-
                blance are maximized at that level of abstraction at which basic objects are
                categorized. This is, categories one level more abstract will be superordinate
                categories (e.g., furniture, vehicle) whose members share only a few attributes
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