Title of article
Children’s sequential information search is sensitive to environmental probabilities
Author/Authors
Nelson، نويسنده , , Jonathan D. and Divjak، نويسنده , , Bojana and Gudmundsdottir، نويسنده , , Gudny and Martignon، نويسنده , , Laura F. and Meder، نويسنده , , Bjِrn، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages
7
From page
74
To page
80
Abstract
We investigated 4th-grade children’s search strategies on sequential search tasks in which the goal is to identify an unknown target object by asking yes–no questions about its features. We used exhaustive search to identify the most efficient question strategies and evaluated the usefulness of children’s questions accordingly. Results show that children have good intuitions regarding questions’ usefulness and search adaptively, relative to the statistical structure of the task environment. Search was especially efficient in a task environment that was representative of real-world experiences. This suggests that children may use their knowledge of real-world environmental statistics to guide their search behavior. We also compared different related search tasks. We found positive transfer effects from first doing a number search task on a later person search task.
Keywords
information search , Optimal experimental design principles , Optimality , Twenty-questions game , Heuristics , information gain
Journal title
Cognition
Serial Year
2014
Journal title
Cognition
Record number
2077929
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