The core tenet of Bayesian modeling is that subjects represent beliefs as distributions over possible hypotheses. Such models have fruitfully been applied to the study of learning in the context of animal conditioning experiments (and analogously designed human learning tasks), where they explain phenomena such as retrospective revaluation that seem to demonstrate that subjects entertain multiple hypotheses simultaneously. However, a recent quantitative analysis of individual subject records by Gallistel and colleagues cast doubt on a very broad family of conditioning models by showing that all of the key features the models capture about even simple learning curves are artifacts of averaging over subjects. Rather than smooth learning curve...
Learning the contingencies of a complex experiment is no easy task for animals. Individuals learn in...
How do people learn? We assess, in a distribution-free manner, subjects?learning and choice rules in...
Recent experiments (Beckers, De Houwer, Pineño, & Miller, 2005;Beckers, Miller, De Houwer, &...
Accurate characterizations of behavior during learning experiments are essential for understanding t...
In a variety of behavioral tasks, subjects exhibit an automatic and apparently suboptimal sequential...
Human subjects exhibit “sequential effects ” in many psychological experiments, in which they respon...
In a variety of behavioral tasks, subjects exhibit an automatic and apparently sub-optimal sequentia...
Humans and other animals are able to discover underlying statistical structure in their environments...
Attentional set-shifting tasks, consisting of multiple stages of discrimination learning, have been...
Humans and other animals are able to discover underlying statistical structure in their environ- men...
Subjects display sensitivity to local patterns in stimulus history (sequential effects) in a variety...
Conceiving of stimuli and responses as causes and effects, and assuming that rats acquire representa...
Postulating that the brain performs approximate Bayesian inference generates principled and empirica...
Kording and Wolpert (2004), hereafter referred to as KW, describe an experiment where subjects engag...
20 pags., 8 figs., 7 tabs.How stable and general is behavior once maximum learning is reached? To an...
Learning the contingencies of a complex experiment is no easy task for animals. Individuals learn in...
How do people learn? We assess, in a distribution-free manner, subjects?learning and choice rules in...
Recent experiments (Beckers, De Houwer, Pineño, & Miller, 2005;Beckers, Miller, De Houwer, &...
Accurate characterizations of behavior during learning experiments are essential for understanding t...
In a variety of behavioral tasks, subjects exhibit an automatic and apparently suboptimal sequential...
Human subjects exhibit “sequential effects ” in many psychological experiments, in which they respon...
In a variety of behavioral tasks, subjects exhibit an automatic and apparently sub-optimal sequentia...
Humans and other animals are able to discover underlying statistical structure in their environments...
Attentional set-shifting tasks, consisting of multiple stages of discrimination learning, have been...
Humans and other animals are able to discover underlying statistical structure in their environ- men...
Subjects display sensitivity to local patterns in stimulus history (sequential effects) in a variety...
Conceiving of stimuli and responses as causes and effects, and assuming that rats acquire representa...
Postulating that the brain performs approximate Bayesian inference generates principled and empirica...
Kording and Wolpert (2004), hereafter referred to as KW, describe an experiment where subjects engag...
20 pags., 8 figs., 7 tabs.How stable and general is behavior once maximum learning is reached? To an...
Learning the contingencies of a complex experiment is no easy task for animals. Individuals learn in...
How do people learn? We assess, in a distribution-free manner, subjects?learning and choice rules in...
Recent experiments (Beckers, De Houwer, Pineño, & Miller, 2005;Beckers, Miller, De Houwer, &...