Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/2618
Title: Using a cognitive architecture for addressing the question of cognitive universals in cross-cultural psychology: The example of awalé
Authors: Gobet, F
Keywords: awalé;mancala;awele;bao;chess;chunking;cognitive architecture;cross-cultural psychology;expertise;short-term memory;universality of processes;CHREST;computer modelling;cuture;ACT-R;Soar;Africa;board game
Issue Date: 2008
Publisher: Sage
Citation: Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology (in press)
Abstract: A central theme in cross-cultural psychology is the extent to which cognitive mechanisms are universal, or, alternatively, are specific to a given culture. We propose a new way to tackle this question: to use the same cognitive architecture, implemented as a computer program, for simulating phenomena in which individuals from different cultures perform a task familiar to their own culture. The CHREST architecture (Gobet et al., 2001; Gobet & Simon, 2000) has simulated a number of empirical phenomena related to the western board game of chess. Here we show that a model implemented in the same architecture accounts for several phenomena in awalé, a board game from the mancala family, which is commonly played in western Africa and in the Caribbean. CHREST first learns chunks by scanning expert-level games, and then is placed in memory experiments and problem-solving situations similar to those used with human youngsters. The model replicates empirical phenomena on memory for awalé positions reasonably well, although not perfectly, and also learns to play a fair, but far from perfect game using pattern recognition. The assumptions that learning is mediated by the acquisition of a large number of chunks and that the capacity of visual short-term memory is limited to three chunks are important in explaining the empirical data for the two games. The implications for theory development in cross-cultural psychology are discussed.
URI: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/2618
Appears in Collections:Psychology
Dept of Life Sciences Research Papers

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