Authors
Gwendolyn Rehrig, Michelle Cheng, Brian C. McMahan, Rahul Shome
Publication date
2021/4/14
Journal
Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications
Volume
6
Issue
1
Pages
32
Description
A major problem in human cognition is to understand how newly acquired information and long-standing beliefs about the environment combine to make decisions and plan behaviors. Over-dependence on long-standing beliefs may be a significant source of suboptimal decision-making in unusual circumstances. While the contribution of long-standing beliefs about the environment to search in real-world scenes is well-studied, less is known about how new evidence informs search decisions, and it is unclear whether the two sources of information are used together optimally to guide search. The present study expanded on the literature on semantic guidance in visual search by modeling a Bayesian ideal observer’s use of long-standing semantic beliefs and recent experience in an active search task. The ability to adjust expectations to the task environment was simulated using the Bayesian ideal observer …
Total citations
Scholar articles