How do infants predict the next future event, when such a prediction requires estimating the event's probability? The literature suggests that adult humans often fail this task because their probability estimates are affected by heuristics and biases or because they can reason about the frequency of classes of events but not about the probability of single events. Recent evidence suggests instead that already at 12 months infants have an intuitive notion of probability that applies to single, never experienced events and that they may use it to predict what will happen next. We present a theory according to which infants' intuitive grasp of the probability of future events derives from their representation of logically consistent future pos...
The formation of expectations for visual stimulus sequences was examined in 2- and 3-month-old infan...
The classical, frequentist and subjective interpretations of probability are the three main perspect...
Chance, randomness and probability constitute statistical notions that are interrelated and characte...
How do infants predict the next future event, when such a prediction requires estimating the event's...
Many organisms can predict future events from the statistics of past experience, but humans also exc...
Many organisms can predict future events from the statistics of past experience, but humans also exc...
Infants look at physically impossible events longer than at physically possible events, and at impro...
Rational agents should integrate probabilities in their predictions about uncertain future events. H...
Recent research shows that preverbal infants can reason about single-case probabilities without rely...
Recent research shows that preverbal infants can reason about single-case probabilities without rely...
A recent surge of research in cognitive developmental psychology examines whether human learners, fr...
Do young children have a basic intuition of posterior probability? Do they update their decisions an...
Recent evidence suggests that infants can generate expectations about future events from a sample of...
Across the first few years of life, infants readily extract many kinds of regularities from their en...
International audiencePreverbal infants manifest probabilistic intuitions in their reactions to the ...
The formation of expectations for visual stimulus sequences was examined in 2- and 3-month-old infan...
The classical, frequentist and subjective interpretations of probability are the three main perspect...
Chance, randomness and probability constitute statistical notions that are interrelated and characte...
How do infants predict the next future event, when such a prediction requires estimating the event's...
Many organisms can predict future events from the statistics of past experience, but humans also exc...
Many organisms can predict future events from the statistics of past experience, but humans also exc...
Infants look at physically impossible events longer than at physically possible events, and at impro...
Rational agents should integrate probabilities in their predictions about uncertain future events. H...
Recent research shows that preverbal infants can reason about single-case probabilities without rely...
Recent research shows that preverbal infants can reason about single-case probabilities without rely...
A recent surge of research in cognitive developmental psychology examines whether human learners, fr...
Do young children have a basic intuition of posterior probability? Do they update their decisions an...
Recent evidence suggests that infants can generate expectations about future events from a sample of...
Across the first few years of life, infants readily extract many kinds of regularities from their en...
International audiencePreverbal infants manifest probabilistic intuitions in their reactions to the ...
The formation of expectations for visual stimulus sequences was examined in 2- and 3-month-old infan...
The classical, frequentist and subjective interpretations of probability are the three main perspect...
Chance, randomness and probability constitute statistical notions that are interrelated and characte...