Several attention-based models of associative learning are built upon the learned predictiveness principle, whereby learning is optimized by attending to the most predictive features and ignoring the least predictive features. Despite their functional similarity, these models differ in their formal mechanisms and thus may produce very different predictions in some circumstances. As we demonstrate, this is particularly evident in the inverse base-rate effect. Using simulations with a modified Mackintosh model and the EXIT model, we found that models based on the learned predictiveness principle can account for rare-outcome choice biases associated with the inverse base-rate effect, despite making opposite predictions for relative attention t...
The inverse base rate effect (IBRE) is a nonrational behavioral phenomenon in predictive learning. C...
A common distinction made by theorists examining the mental processes contributing to human learning...
Two experiments used eye-tracking procedures to investigate the relationship between attention and a...
People often fail to use base-rate information appropriately in decision-making. This is evident in ...
Prediction error ("surprise") affects the rate of learning: We learn more rapidly about cues for whi...
Learning permits even relatively uninteresting stimuli to capture attention if they are established ...
Prediction error (‘‘surprise’’) affects the rate of learning: We learn more rapidly about cues for w...
The Inverse Base Rate Effect (IBRE; Medin & Edelson, 1988) is a non-rational behavioural phenomenon ...
It is well established that associative learning, such as learning new cue-outcome pairings, produce...
Within the domain of associative learning, there is substantial evidence that people (and other anim...
This article presents a comprehensive survey of research concerning interactions between associative...
Two experiments used eye-tracking procedures to investigate the relationship between attention and a...
The inverse base-rate effect is the observation that on certain occasions people classify new object...
Over the last forty years, experimental support for different models of associative learning has com...
This article presents a comprehensive survey of research concerning interactions between associative...
The inverse base rate effect (IBRE) is a nonrational behavioral phenomenon in predictive learning. C...
A common distinction made by theorists examining the mental processes contributing to human learning...
Two experiments used eye-tracking procedures to investigate the relationship between attention and a...
People often fail to use base-rate information appropriately in decision-making. This is evident in ...
Prediction error ("surprise") affects the rate of learning: We learn more rapidly about cues for whi...
Learning permits even relatively uninteresting stimuli to capture attention if they are established ...
Prediction error (‘‘surprise’’) affects the rate of learning: We learn more rapidly about cues for w...
The Inverse Base Rate Effect (IBRE; Medin & Edelson, 1988) is a non-rational behavioural phenomenon ...
It is well established that associative learning, such as learning new cue-outcome pairings, produce...
Within the domain of associative learning, there is substantial evidence that people (and other anim...
This article presents a comprehensive survey of research concerning interactions between associative...
Two experiments used eye-tracking procedures to investigate the relationship between attention and a...
The inverse base-rate effect is the observation that on certain occasions people classify new object...
Over the last forty years, experimental support for different models of associative learning has com...
This article presents a comprehensive survey of research concerning interactions between associative...
The inverse base rate effect (IBRE) is a nonrational behavioral phenomenon in predictive learning. C...
A common distinction made by theorists examining the mental processes contributing to human learning...
Two experiments used eye-tracking procedures to investigate the relationship between attention and a...