The present work investigates whether different quantification mechanisms (set comparison, vague quantification, and proportional estimation) can be jointly learned from visual scenes by a multi-task computational model. The motivation is that, in humans, these processes underlie the same cognitive, non-symbolic ability, which allows an automatic estimation and comparison of set magnitudes. We show that when information about lower complexity tasks is available, the higher-level proportional task becomes more accurate than when performed in isolation. Moreover, the multi-task model is able to generalize to unseen combinations of target/non-target objects. Consistently with behavioral evidence showing the interference of absolute number in t...
The approximate number system (ANS) underlies our rapid and intuitive sense for quantities (Feigenso...
This thesis presents experimental and computational modeling studies on the mental representations o...
We see the external world as consisting not only of objects and their parts, but also of relations t...
Comunicació presentada a la Conference of the North American Chapter of the Association for Computat...
Like many species, humans can perform non-verbal estimates of quantity through our innate approximat...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, 2016.Drawing o...
In this paper we examine how vague quantifiers, such as few, several, lots of, map onto non-linguist...
How are comparisons of magnitude achieved by the perceptual system? The most common approach to answ...
The paper explores the cognitive mechanisms involved in the verification of sentences with proportio...
This paper presents experimental evidence on the differences in a sentence-picture verification task...
A model of subjective magnitude comparisons is explored, which assumes that subjects compare symboli...
Defining the meaning of vague quantifiers (‘few’, ‘most’, ‘all’) has been, and still is, the Holy Gr...
The literature on vague quantifiers in English (words like “some”, “many”, etc.) is replete with dem...
We investigate the reasoning ability of pretrained vision and language (V&L) models in two tasks tha...
We examine the verification of simple quantifiers in natural language from a computational model per...
The approximate number system (ANS) underlies our rapid and intuitive sense for quantities (Feigenso...
This thesis presents experimental and computational modeling studies on the mental representations o...
We see the external world as consisting not only of objects and their parts, but also of relations t...
Comunicació presentada a la Conference of the North American Chapter of the Association for Computat...
Like many species, humans can perform non-verbal estimates of quantity through our innate approximat...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, 2016.Drawing o...
In this paper we examine how vague quantifiers, such as few, several, lots of, map onto non-linguist...
How are comparisons of magnitude achieved by the perceptual system? The most common approach to answ...
The paper explores the cognitive mechanisms involved in the verification of sentences with proportio...
This paper presents experimental evidence on the differences in a sentence-picture verification task...
A model of subjective magnitude comparisons is explored, which assumes that subjects compare symboli...
Defining the meaning of vague quantifiers (‘few’, ‘most’, ‘all’) has been, and still is, the Holy Gr...
The literature on vague quantifiers in English (words like “some”, “many”, etc.) is replete with dem...
We investigate the reasoning ability of pretrained vision and language (V&L) models in two tasks tha...
We examine the verification of simple quantifiers in natural language from a computational model per...
The approximate number system (ANS) underlies our rapid and intuitive sense for quantities (Feigenso...
This thesis presents experimental and computational modeling studies on the mental representations o...
We see the external world as consisting not only of objects and their parts, but also of relations t...