Response latencies and eye gaze provide insight on how toddlers gather evidence under uncertainty
Sarah Leckey (),
Diana Selmeczy,
Alireza Kazemi,
Elliott G. Johnson,
Emily Hembacher and
Simona Ghetti ()
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Sarah Leckey: University of California, Davis
Diana Selmeczy: University of California, Davis
Alireza Kazemi: University of California, Davis
Elliott G. Johnson: University of California, Davis
Emily Hembacher: University of California, Davis
Simona Ghetti: University of California, Davis
Nature Human Behaviour, 2020, vol. 4, issue 9, 928-936
Abstract:
Abstract Toddlers exhibit behaviours that suggest judicious responses to states of uncertainty (for example, turning to adults for help), but little is known about the informational basis of these behaviours. Across two experiments, of which experiment 2 was a preregistered replication, 160 toddlers (aged 25 to 32 months) identified a target from two partially occluded similar (for example, elephant versus bear) or dissimilar (for example, elephant versus broccoli) images. Accuracy was lower for the similar trials than for the dissimilar trials. By fitting drift–diffusion models to response times, we found that toddlers accumulated evidence more slowly but required less evidence for similar trials compared with dissimilar trials. By analysing eye movements, we found that toddlers took longer to settle on the selected image during inaccurate trials and switched their gaze between response options more frequently during inaccurate trials and accurately identified similar items. Exploratory analyses revealed that the evidence-accumulation parameter correlated positively with the use of uncertainty language. Overall, these findings inform theories on the emergence of evidence accumulation under uncertainty.
Date: 2020
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:nat:nathum:v:4:y:2020:i:9:d:10.1038_s41562-020-0913-y
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DOI: 10.1038/s41562-020-0913-y
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