journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38482688/uncertain-facts-or-uncertain-values-testing-the-distinction-between-empirical-and-normative-uncertainty-in-moral-judgments
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Maximilian Theisen, Markus Germar
People can be uncertain in their moral judgments. Philosophers have argued that such uncertainty can either refer to the underlying empirical facts (empirical uncertainty) or to the normative evaluation of these facts itself (normative uncertainty). Psychological investigations of this distinction, however, are rare. In this paper, we combined factor-analytical and experimental approaches to show that empirical and normative uncertainty describe two related but different psychological states. In Study 1, we asked N = 265 participants to describe a case of moral uncertainty and to rate different aspects of their uncertainty about this case...
March 2024: Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38478742/lexical-alignment-is-pervasive-across-contexts-in-non-weird-adult-child-interactions
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Adriana Chee Jing Chieng, Camille J Wynn, Tze Peng Wong, Tyson S Barrett, Stephanie A Borrie
Lexical alignment, a communication phenomenon where conversational partners adapt their word choices to become more similar, plays an important role in the development of language and social communication skills. While this has been studied extensively in the conversations of preschool-aged children and their parents in Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, and Democratic (WEIRD) communities, research in other pediatric populations is sparse. This study makes significant expansions on the existing literature by focusing on alignment in naturalistic conversations of school-aged children from a non-WEIRD population across multiple conversational tasks and with different types of adult partners...
March 2024: Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38436536/the-role-of-feedback-in-the-statistical-learning-of-language-like-regularities
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Felicity F Frinsel, Fabio Trecca, Morten H Christiansen
In language learning, learners engage with their environment, incorporating cues from different sources. However, in lab-based experiments, using artificial languages, many of the cues and features that are part of real-world language learning are stripped away. In three experiments, we investigated the role of positive, negative, and mixed feedback on the gradual learning of language-like statistical regularities within an active guessing game paradigm. In Experiment 1, participants received deterministic feedback (100%), whereas probabilistic feedback (i...
March 2024: Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38407526/cognitive-science-from-the-perspective-of-linguistic-diversity
#24
LETTER
Yoolim Kim, Annika Tjuka
This letter addresses two issues in language research that are important to cognitive science: the comparability of word meanings across languages and the neglect of an integrated approach to writing systems. The first issue challenges generativist claims by emphasizing the importance of comparability of data, drawing on typologists' findings about different languages. The second issue addresses the exclusion of diverse writing systems from linguistic investigation and argues for a more extensive study of their effects on language and cognition...
February 2024: Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38407496/integrating-social-cognition-into-domain-general-control-interactive-activation-and-competition-for-the-control-of-action-icon
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Robert Ward, Richard Ramsey
Social cognition differs from general cognition in its focus on understanding, perceiving, and interpreting social information. However, we argue that the significance of domain-general processes for controlling cognition has been historically undervalued in social cognition and social neuroscience research. We suggest much of social cognition can be characterized as specialized feature representations supported by domain-general cognitive control systems. To test this proposal, we develop a comprehensive working model, based on an interactive activation and competition architecture and applied to the control of action...
February 2024: Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38402448/determining-the-relativity-of-word-meanings-through-the-construction-of-individualized-models-of-semantic-memory
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Brendan T Johns
Distributional models of lexical semantics are capable of acquiring sophisticated representations of word meanings. The main theoretical insight provided by these models is that they demonstrate the systematic connection between the knowledge that people acquire and the experience that they have with the natural language environment. However, linguistic experience is inherently variable and differs radically across people due to demographic and cultural variables. Recently, distributional models have been used to examine how word meanings vary across languages and it was found that there is considerable variability in the meanings of words across languages for most semantic categories...
February 2024: Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38402447/how-prior-knowledge-gesture-instruction-and-interference-after-instruction-interact-to-influence-learning-of-mathematical-equivalence
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Susan Wagner Cook, Elle M D Wernette, Madison Valentine, Mary Aldugom, Todd Pruner, Kimberly M Fenn
Although children learn more when teachers gesture, it is not clear how gesture supports learning. Here, we sought to investigate the nature of the memory processes that underlie the observed benefits of gesture on lasting learning. We hypothesized that instruction with gesture might create memory representations that are particularly resistant to interference. We investigated this possibility in a classroom study with 402 second- and third-grade children. Participants received classroom-level instruction in mathematical equivalence using videos with or without accompanying gesture...
February 2024: Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38402446/the-information-processing-perspective-on-categorization
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Manolo Martínez
Categorization behavior can be fruitfully analyzed in terms of the trade-off between as high as possible faithfulness in the transmission of information about samples of the classes to be categorized, and as low as possible transmission costs for that same information. The kinds of categorization behaviors we associate with conceptual atoms, prototypes, and exemplars emerge naturally as a result of this trade-off, in the presence of certain natural constraints on the probabilistic distribution of samples, and the ways in which we measure faithfulness...
February 2024: Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38394124/the-icing-on-the-cake-or-is-it-frosting-the-influence-of-group-membership-on-children-s-lexical-choices
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Thomas St Pierre, Jida Jaffan, Craig G Chambers, Elizabeth K Johnson
Adults are skilled at using language to construct/negotiate identity and to signal affiliation with others, but little is known about how these abilities develop in children. Clearly, children mirror statistical patterns in their local environment (e.g., Canadian children using zed instead of zee), but do they flexibly adapt their linguistic choices on the fly in response to the choices of different peers? To address this question, we examined the effect of group membership on 7- to 9-year-olds' labeling of objects in a trivia game, exploring whether they were more likely to use a particular label (e...
February 2024: Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38323743/calculated-comparisons-manufacturing-societal-causal-judgments-by-implying-different-counterfactual-outcomes
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jamie Amemiya, Gail D Heyman, Caren M Walker
How do people come to opposite causal judgments about societal problems, such as whether a public health policy reduced COVID-19 cases? The current research tests an understudied cognitive mechanism in which people may agree about what actually happened (e.g., that a public health policy was implemented and COVID-19 cases declined), but can be made to disagree about the counterfactual, or what would have happened otherwise (e.g., whether COVID-19 cases would have declined naturally without intervention) via comparison cases...
February 2024: Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38320109/spontaneous-eye-blinks-map-the-probability-of-perceptual-reinterpretation-during-visual-and-auditory-ambiguity
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Supriya Murali, Barbara Händel
Spontaneous eye blinks are modulated around perceptual events. Our previous study, using a visual ambiguous stimulus, indicated that blink probability decreases before a reported perceptual switch. In the current study, we tested our hypothesis that an absence of blinks marks a time in which perceptual switches are facilitated in- and outside the visual domain. In three experiments, presenting either a visual motion quartet in light or darkness or a bistable auditory streaming stimulus, we found a co-occurrence of blink rate reduction with increased perceptual switch probability...
February 2024: Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38303504/putting-it-together-together
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Chen Zheng, Barbara Tversky
People are not as fast or as strong as many other creatures that evolved around us. What gives us an evolutionary advantage is working together to achieve common aims. Coordinating joint action begins at a tender age with such cooperative activities as alternating babbling and clapping games. Adult joint activities are far more complex and use multiple means of coordination. Joint action has attracted qualitative analyses by sociolinguists, cognitive scientists, and philosophers as well as empirical analyses and theories by cognitive scientists...
February 2024: Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38294098/modeling-magnitude-discrimination-effects-of-internal-precision-and-attentional-weighting-of-feature-dimensions
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Emily M Sanford, Chad M Topaz, Justin Halberda
Given a rich environment, how do we decide on what information to use? A view of a single entity (e.g., a group of birds) affords many distinct interpretations, including their number, average size, and spatial extent. An enduring challenge for cognition, therefore, is to focus resources on the most relevant evidence for any particular decision. In the present study, subjects completed three tasks-number discrimination, surface area discrimination, and convex hull discrimination-with the same stimulus set, where these three features were orthogonalized...
February 2024: Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38294059/the-keys-to-the-future-an-examination-of-statistical-versus-discriminative-accounts-of-serial-pattern-learning
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Fabian Tomaschek, Michael Ramscar, Jessie S Nixon
Sequence learning is fundamental to a wide range of cognitive functions. Explaining how sequences-and the relations between the elements they comprise-are learned is a fundamental challenge to cognitive science. However, although hundreds of articles addressing this question are published each year, the actual learning mechanisms involved in the learning of sequences are rarely investigated. We present three experiments that seek to examine these mechanisms during a typing task. Experiments 1 and 2 tested learning during typing single letters on each trial...
February 2024: Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38279901/evaluative-deflation-social-expectations-and-the-zone-of-moral-indifference
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Pascale Willemsen, Lucien Baumgartner, Bianca Cepollaro, Kevin Reuter
Acts that are considered undesirable standardly violate our expectations. In contrast, acts that count as morally desirable can either meet our expectations or exceed them. The zone in which an act can be morally desirable yet not exceed our expectations is what we call the zone of moral indifference, and it has so far been neglected. In this paper, we show that people can use positive terms in a deflated manner to refer to actions in the zone of moral indifference, whereas negative terms cannot be so interpreted...
January 2024: Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38279899/hand-gestures-have-predictive-potential-during-conversation-an-investigation-of-the-timing-of-gestures-in-relation-to-speech
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marlijn Ter Bekke, Linda Drijvers, Judith Holler
During face-to-face conversation, transitions between speaker turns are incredibly fast. These fast turn exchanges seem to involve next speakers predicting upcoming semantic information, such that next turn planning can begin before a current turn is complete. Given that face-to-face conversation also involves the use of communicative bodily signals, an important question is how bodily signals such as co-speech hand gestures play into these processes of prediction and fast responding. In this corpus study, we found that hand gestures that depict or refer to semantic information started before the corresponding information in speech, which held both for the onset of the gesture as a whole, as well as the onset of the stroke (the most meaningful part of the gesture)...
January 2024: Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38226686/a-computational-approach-to-identifying-cultural-keywords-across-languages
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Zheng Wei Lim, Harry Stuart, Simon De Deyne, Terry Regier, Ekaterina Vylomova, Trevor Cohn, Charles Kemp
Distinctive aspects of a culture are often reflected in the meaning and usage of words in the language spoken by bearers of that culture. Keywords such as душа (soul) in Russian, hati (heart) in Indonesian and Malay, and gezellig (convivial/cosy/fun) in Dutch are held to be especially culturally revealing, and scholars have identified a number of such keywords using careful linguistic analyses (Peeters, 2020b; Wierzbicka, 1990). Because keywords are expected to have different statistical properties than related words in other languages, we argue that a quantitative comparison of word usage across languages can help to identify cultural keywords...
January 2024: Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38212897/multi-level-linguistic-alignment-in-a-dynamic-collaborative-problem-solving-task
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nicholas D Duran, Amie Paige, Sidney K D'Mello
Cocreating meaning in collaboration is challenging. Success is often determined by people's abilities to coordinate their language to converge upon shared mental representations. Here we explore one set of low-level linguistic behaviors, linguistic alignment, that both emerges from, and facilitates, outcomes of high-level convergence. Linguistic alignment captures the ways people reuse, that is, "align to," the lexical, syntactic, and semantic forms of others' utterances. Our focus is on the temporal change of multi-level linguistic alignment, as well as how alignment is related to communicative outcomes within a unique collaborative problem-solving paradigm...
January 2024: Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38196388/thought-experiments-as-an-error-detection-and-correction-tool
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Igor Bascandziev
The ability to recognize and correct errors in one's explanatory understanding is critically important for learning. However, little is known about the mechanisms that determine when and under what circumstances errors are detected and how they are corrected. The present study investigated thought experiments as a potential tool that can reveal errors and trigger belief revision in the service of error correction. Across two experiments, 1149 participants engaged in reasoning about force and motion (a domain with well-documented misconceptions) in a pre-training-training-post-training design...
January 2024: Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38196383/when-good-intention-goes-away-social-feedback-modulates-the-influence-of-outcome-valence-on-temporal-binding
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yunyun Chen, Hong He, Xintong Zou, Xuemin Zhang
The retrospective view of temporal binding (TB), the temporal contraction between one's actions and their effects, proposes that TB is influenced by what happens after the action. However, the role of the interaction between multiple sources of information following the action in the formation of TB has received limited attention. The current study aims to address this gap by investigating the combined influence of social feedback and outcome valence (i.e., positive or negative outcomes) on TB. In Experiment 1, the valenced outcome was followed by either positive or negative social feedback...
January 2024: Cognitive Science
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