Literature DB >> 36065061

Foundations of intuitive power analyses in children and adults.

Madeline C Pelz1, Kelsey R Allen1, Joshua B Tenenbaum1, Laura E Schulz2.   

Abstract

Decades of research indicate that some of the epistemic practices that support scientific enquiry emerge as part of intuitive reasoning in early childhood. Here, we ask whether adults and young children can use intuitive statistical reasoning and metacognitive strategies to estimate how much information they might need to solve different discrimination problems, suggesting that they have some of the foundations for 'intuitive power analyses'. Across five experiments, both adults (N = 290) and children (N = 48, 6-8 years) were able to precisely represent the relative difficulty of discriminating populations and recognized that larger samples were required for populations with greater overlap. Participants were sensitive to the cost of sampling, as well as the perceptual nature of the stimuli. These findings indicate that both young children and adults metacognitively represent their own ability to make discriminations even in the absence of data, and can use this to guide efficient and effective exploration.
© 2022. This is a U.S. Government work and not under copyright protection in the US; foreign copyright protection may apply.

Entities:  

Year:  2022        PMID: 36065061     DOI: 10.1038/s41562-022-01427-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nat Hum Behav        ISSN: 2397-3374


  21 in total

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Journal:  Science       Date:  1999-01-01       Impact factor: 47.728

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Journal:  Science       Date:  1996-12-13       Impact factor: 47.728

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Authors:  Elizabeth Baraff Bonawitz; Tessa J P van Schijndel; Daniel Friel; Laura Schulz
Journal:  Cogn Psychol       Date:  2012-01-25       Impact factor: 3.468

8.  Infants consider both the sample and the sampling process in inductive generalization.

Authors:  Hyowon Gweon; Joshua B Tenenbaum; Laura E Schulz
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2010-04-30       Impact factor: 11.205

9.  Pure reasoning in 12-month-old infants as probabilistic inference.

Authors:  Erno Téglás; Edward Vul; Vittorio Girotto; Michel Gonzalez; Joshua B Tenenbaum; Luca L Bonatti
Journal:  Science       Date:  2011-05-27       Impact factor: 47.728

10.  The Goldilocks effect: human infants allocate attention to visual sequences that are neither too simple nor too complex.

Authors:  Celeste Kidd; Steven T Piantadosi; Richard N Aslin
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-05-23       Impact factor: 3.240

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