The psychophysics of compositionality: Relational scene perception occurs in a canonical order [0.03%]
组合性的心理物理学:关系场景感知以规范顺序发生
Zekun Sun,Chaz Firestone,Alon Hafri
Zekun Sun
We see not only objects and their features (e.g., glass vases or wooden tables) but also relations between them (e.g., a vase on a table). An emerging view accounts for such relational representations by positing that visual perception is c...
Forest before trees? It depends on not only what you see, but also what you hear [0.03%]
听觉和视觉都重要:远近效应的声音线索指示作用研究
Xiaoyu Tang,Haoming Liu,Heming Zhang et al.
Xiaoyu Tang et al.
Prior researches on global-local processing have focused on hierarchical objects in the visual modality, while the real-world involves multisensory interactions. The present study investigated whether the simultaneous presentation of audito...
Numerosity adaptation resists filtering: Insights from an illusory contour paradigm [0.03%]
数量适应抵抗过滤:来自幻觉轮廓范式的启示
Andrea Adriano,Michaël Vande Velde
Andrea Adriano
The mechanisms underlying numerosity perception remain debated, with some theories proposing a dedicated system for segmented items and others suggesting reliance on low-level features like spatial-frequency or texture-density. Numerosity a...
Conceptualizing cognitive flexibility: Singular versus modular view - Which one holds up? [0.03%]
认知灵活性的概念化:单一观与模块观——哪个更有说服力?
Yuval Himai,Eyal Heled
Yuval Himai
Cognitive flexibility (CF) refers to the ability to adapt thinking and behavior to new or changing demands. However, conceptions of CF disagree on its structure, whether it is a uniform or a modular ability composed of different subtypes. W...
Natural counting and measuring: The role of linguistic and referential cues in determining which quantity is "More" [0.03%]
自然计数和测量:语言和参照线索在确定“哪个数量更多”中起的作用
Grace A Coram,Lance J Rips
Grace A Coram
When we decide "Which is more?" for groups of physical objects or substances, we compare the groups along a quantitative dimension like numerosity or size. The nature of these comparisons is sometimes unclear, however, because the choice of...
Maximilian Maier,Adam J L Harris,David Kellen et al.
Maximilian Maier et al.
In everyday life, people routinely make decisions that involve irredeemable risks such as death (e.g., while driving). Even though these decisions under extinction risk are common, practically important, and have different properties compar...
Tadeg Quillien,Neil Bramley,Christopher G Lucas
Tadeg Quillien
People often make judgments about uncertain facts and events, for example 'Germany will win the world cup'. Judgment under uncertainty is often studied with reference to a normative ideal according to which people should make guesses that h...
Retrieving past experiences to inform novel decisions through a process of cascading episodic sampling [0.03%]
通过级联情景采样过程来检索过去的经验以告知新的决策
Achiel Fenneman,Sarah T Malamut,Alan G Sanfey
Achiel Fenneman
We can guide our decisions in novel situations by drawing on our past experiences (episodic memories). While at times we can retrieve relevant episodes via cued recall, other situations may require a process of memory search. But what mecha...
Xiaoli Chen,Yingyan Chen,Timothy P McNamara
Xiaoli Chen
Spatial navigation involves the use of various cues. This study examined how cue conflict influences navigation by contrasting landmarks and optic flow. Participants estimated spatial distances under different levels of cue conflict: minima...
Easy as ABC. Functional-pragmatic factors explain "binding-principle" constraints on pronoun interpretation: Evidence from nine pre-registered rating studies [0.03%]
如ABC般简单。功能实用因素解释了决定代词释义的“约束原则”:“来自九项预注册调查研究的证据
Liam Blything,Anna Theakston,Silke Brandt et al.
Liam Blything et al.
How do English-speakers interpret pronouns (e.g., himself, him and he) in sentences such as Samuel told Oliver about himself, Samuel told Oliver about the picture of him, and He was driving home, when Yusuf started coughing? Since the 1980s...