There is a long history of experiments in which participants are instructed to generate a long sequence of binary random numbers. The scope of this line of research has shifted over the years from identifying the basic psychological principles and/or the heuristics that lead to deviations from randomness, to one of predicting future choices. In this paper, we used generalized linear regression and the framework of Reinforcement Learning in order to address both points. In particular, we used logistic regression analysis in order to characterize the temporal sequence of participants' choices. Surprisingly, a population analysis indicated that the contribution of the most recent trial has only a weak effect on behavior, compared to more prece...
Cumulative records, which show individual responses in real time, are a natural but neglected starti...
Many of the decisions we make in our everyday lives are sequential and entail sparse rewards. While ...
Whether driving a car, making critical medical decisions in the ER, answering questions in a marketi...
Binary choice tasks, such as 2-alternative forced choice, show a complex yet consistent pattern of s...
In a variety of behavioral tasks, subjects exhibit an automatic and apparently suboptimal sequential...
In a variety of behavioral tasks, subjects exhibit an automatic and apparently sub-optimal sequentia...
Subjects display sensitivity to local patterns in stimulus history (sequential effects) in a variety...
In two-alternative discrimination tasks, experimenters usually randomize the location of the rewarde...
We demonstrate the close relationship that exists between random sequence generation and working mem...
The recent history of events can influence responding despite there being no contingent relationship...
Everyday tasks seldom involve isolate actions but sequences of them. We can see whether previous act...
To explicate the mechanisms which support attempts at random number production, two experiments expl...
Everyday tasks seldom involve isolate actions but sequences of them. We can see whether previous act...
Responses in identification-learning tasks depend on events from recent trials. A model for these se...
Data from the study of human speech, spelling, and short-term memory for serial order are often take...
Cumulative records, which show individual responses in real time, are a natural but neglected starti...
Many of the decisions we make in our everyday lives are sequential and entail sparse rewards. While ...
Whether driving a car, making critical medical decisions in the ER, answering questions in a marketi...
Binary choice tasks, such as 2-alternative forced choice, show a complex yet consistent pattern of s...
In a variety of behavioral tasks, subjects exhibit an automatic and apparently suboptimal sequential...
In a variety of behavioral tasks, subjects exhibit an automatic and apparently sub-optimal sequentia...
Subjects display sensitivity to local patterns in stimulus history (sequential effects) in a variety...
In two-alternative discrimination tasks, experimenters usually randomize the location of the rewarde...
We demonstrate the close relationship that exists between random sequence generation and working mem...
The recent history of events can influence responding despite there being no contingent relationship...
Everyday tasks seldom involve isolate actions but sequences of them. We can see whether previous act...
To explicate the mechanisms which support attempts at random number production, two experiments expl...
Everyday tasks seldom involve isolate actions but sequences of them. We can see whether previous act...
Responses in identification-learning tasks depend on events from recent trials. A model for these se...
Data from the study of human speech, spelling, and short-term memory for serial order are often take...
Cumulative records, which show individual responses in real time, are a natural but neglected starti...
Many of the decisions we make in our everyday lives are sequential and entail sparse rewards. While ...
Whether driving a car, making critical medical decisions in the ER, answering questions in a marketi...