Conference Proceedings

People are sensitive to hypothesis sparsity during category discrimination

S Langsford, AT Hendrickson, A Perfors, DJ Navarro

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

Abstract

Previous work has shown that the information value of requests can be manipulated by controlling the sparsity of hypotheses, the degree to which category members are rare or common in the domain under consideration when making those requests. However, the degree to which people are sensitive to expected information value is unknown. This study examined a binary sorting task where sparsity differed across conditions. In contrast to previous work using hypotheses representable as visual areas, the stimuli in this study defined hypotheses in an abstract similarity space over geometric shapes. Participants could request labels for either category members or non-members. While both request types ..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Australian Research Council


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