Conference Proceedings

People ignore token frequency when deciding how widely to generalize

A Perfors, K Ransom, DJ Navarro

Proceedings of the 36th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society Cogsci 2014 | Cognitive Science Society | Published : 2014

Abstract

Many theoretical accounts of generalization suggest that with increasing data, people should tighten their generalizations. However, these accounts presume that the additional data points are all distinct. Other accounts, such as the adaptor grammar framework in linguistics (Johnson, Griffiths, & Goldwater, 2007), suggest that when the additional data points are identical, generalizations about grammaticality need not tighten appreciably: they may be made on the basis of type frequency rather than token frequency (although token frequency can affect other types of learning). We investigated what happens in this situation by presenting participants with identical data in both a linguistic and..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Australian Research Council


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