Learning about the structure of the world requires learning probabilistic relationships: rules in which cues do not predict outcomes with certainty. However, in some cases, the ability to track probabilistic relationships is a handicap, leading adults to perform non-normatively in prediction tasks. For example, in the dilution effect, predictions made from the combination of two cues of different strengths are less accurate than those made from the stronger cue alone. Here we show that dilution is an adult problem; 11-month-old infants combine strong and weak predictors normatively. These results extend and add support for the less is more hypothesis: limited cognitive resources can lead children to represent probabilistic information diffe...
Error-based theories of language acquisition suggest that children, like adults, continuously make a...
THE DARK SIDE OF STATISTICS: NUMERACY AND LUCK IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF PROBABILISTIC REASONING Sarah F...
People persist in confounding random processes with naïve conceptions of chance and luck; at the sa...
Uncertainty plays a role in a variety of early learning processes such as numerical reasoning, langu...
In daily life, we make decisions that are associated with probabilistic outcomes (e.g., the chance o...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Dept. Brain and Cognitive Sciences, 2013.When exploring ou...
Forming expectations about what we are likely to perceive often facilitates perception. We forge suc...
In our daily lives we continually confront situations that require making decisions without sufficie...
When adapting to a risky world, decision makers must be capable of grasping the probabilistic nature...
Research has not yet reached a consensus on why humans match probabilities instead of maximise in a ...
People’s emotional reactions often depend on probability. However, it is unknown whether children co...
In a variety of domains, children have been observed to overregularize inconsistent input, while adu...
In probabilistic categorization, also known as multiple cue probability learning (MCPL), people lear...
This collection includes data from a series of laboratory behavioural experiments. The experiments i...
A recent surge of research in cognitive developmental psychology examines whether human learners, fr...
Error-based theories of language acquisition suggest that children, like adults, continuously make a...
THE DARK SIDE OF STATISTICS: NUMERACY AND LUCK IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF PROBABILISTIC REASONING Sarah F...
People persist in confounding random processes with naïve conceptions of chance and luck; at the sa...
Uncertainty plays a role in a variety of early learning processes such as numerical reasoning, langu...
In daily life, we make decisions that are associated with probabilistic outcomes (e.g., the chance o...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Dept. Brain and Cognitive Sciences, 2013.When exploring ou...
Forming expectations about what we are likely to perceive often facilitates perception. We forge suc...
In our daily lives we continually confront situations that require making decisions without sufficie...
When adapting to a risky world, decision makers must be capable of grasping the probabilistic nature...
Research has not yet reached a consensus on why humans match probabilities instead of maximise in a ...
People’s emotional reactions often depend on probability. However, it is unknown whether children co...
In a variety of domains, children have been observed to overregularize inconsistent input, while adu...
In probabilistic categorization, also known as multiple cue probability learning (MCPL), people lear...
This collection includes data from a series of laboratory behavioural experiments. The experiments i...
A recent surge of research in cognitive developmental psychology examines whether human learners, fr...
Error-based theories of language acquisition suggest that children, like adults, continuously make a...
THE DARK SIDE OF STATISTICS: NUMERACY AND LUCK IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF PROBABILISTIC REASONING Sarah F...
People persist in confounding random processes with naïve conceptions of chance and luck; at the sa...