Experience is known to facilitate our ability to interpret sequences of events and make predictions about the future by extracting temporal regularities in our environments. Here, we ask whether uncertainty in dynamic environments affects our ability to learn predictive structures. We exposed participants to sequences of symbols determined by first-order Markov models and asked them to indicate which symbol they expected to follow each sequence. We introduced uncertainty in this prediction task by manipulating the: (a) probability of symbol co-occurrence, (b) stimulus presentation rate. Further, we manipulated feedback, as it is known to play a key role in resolving uncertainty. Our results demonstrate that increasing the similarity in the ...
In our daily lives timing of our actions plays an essential role when we navigate the complex everyd...
To function effectively, brains need to make predictions about their environment based on past exper...
Past research in animals has suggested that attention is distributed to exploit known relationships ...
Experience is known to facilitate our ability to interpret sequences of events and make predictions ...
Experience is known to facilitate our ability to interpret sequences of events and make predictions ...
Human behavior is guided by our expectations about the future. Often, we make predictions by monit...
In daily life, we make decisions that are associated with probabilistic outcomes (e.g., the chance o...
Recent work has shown that humans can learn or detect complex dependencies among variables. Even lea...
AbstractPrevious experience is thought to facilitate our ability to extract spatial and temporal reg...
Recently, evidence has emerged that humans approach learning using Bayesian updating rather than (mo...
Statistical learning research often assumes that learners collect global statistics across the entir...
Previous experience is thought to facilitate our ability to extract spatial and temporal regularitie...
Successful human behavior depends on the brain's ability to extract meaningful structure from inform...
In dynamic environments, when faced with a choice of which learning strategy to adopt, do people cho...
Abstract An abundant literature reports on ‘sequential effects’ observed when humans make prediction...
In our daily lives timing of our actions plays an essential role when we navigate the complex everyd...
To function effectively, brains need to make predictions about their environment based on past exper...
Past research in animals has suggested that attention is distributed to exploit known relationships ...
Experience is known to facilitate our ability to interpret sequences of events and make predictions ...
Experience is known to facilitate our ability to interpret sequences of events and make predictions ...
Human behavior is guided by our expectations about the future. Often, we make predictions by monit...
In daily life, we make decisions that are associated with probabilistic outcomes (e.g., the chance o...
Recent work has shown that humans can learn or detect complex dependencies among variables. Even lea...
AbstractPrevious experience is thought to facilitate our ability to extract spatial and temporal reg...
Recently, evidence has emerged that humans approach learning using Bayesian updating rather than (mo...
Statistical learning research often assumes that learners collect global statistics across the entir...
Previous experience is thought to facilitate our ability to extract spatial and temporal regularitie...
Successful human behavior depends on the brain's ability to extract meaningful structure from inform...
In dynamic environments, when faced with a choice of which learning strategy to adopt, do people cho...
Abstract An abundant literature reports on ‘sequential effects’ observed when humans make prediction...
In our daily lives timing of our actions plays an essential role when we navigate the complex everyd...
To function effectively, brains need to make predictions about their environment based on past exper...
Past research in animals has suggested that attention is distributed to exploit known relationships ...