Investigating Sensitivity to Shared Information and Personal Experience in Children's Use of Majority Information.

Q1 Social Sciences
Open Mind Pub Date : 2025-02-08 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1162/opmi_a_00182
Rebekah A Gelpí, Kay Otsubo, Amy Whalen, Daphna Buchsbaum
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Children and adults alike rely on others to learn about the world, but also need to be able to determine the strength of both their own evidence as well as the evidence that other people provide, particularly when different sources of information disagree. For example, if two informants agree on a belief but share the same evidence, their testimony is statistically dependent on each other, and may be weaker evidence for that belief than two informants who draw on different pieces of evidence to support that belief. Across three experiments (total N = 492), we examine how 4- and 5-year-old children evaluate statistical dependency on a task where they must determine which of two jars that toys were drawn from. A majority of informants, whose testimony could draw from the same evidence or different evidence, always endorsed one jar. Then, children were presented with a dissenting informant or their own personal data that was consistent with the other jar. Children showed no sensitivity to statistical dependency, choosing the majority with equal probability regardless of the independence of their testimony, but also systematically overweighted their own personal data, endorsing the jar consistent with their own evidence more often than would be predicted by an optimal Bayesian model. In contrast, children made choices consistent with this model on a similar task in which the data was presented to children without testimony. Our findings suggest that young children treat majorities as broadly informative, but that the challenges of inferring others' experiences may lead them to rely on concrete, visible evidence when it is available.

调查儿童使用主要信息时对共享信息和个人经历的敏感性。
儿童和成人都依赖他人来了解世界,但也需要能够确定自己的证据和他人提供的证据的强度,特别是当不同来源的信息不一致时。例如,如果两个举报人同意一个信念,但共享相同的证据,他们的证词在统计上是相互依赖的,并且可能比两个举报人利用不同的证据来支持该信念的证据弱。通过三个实验(总N = 492),我们研究了4岁和5岁的儿童如何评估统计依赖性的任务,他们必须确定玩具是从两个罐子中取出的哪个。大多数举报人的证词可能来自相同的证据,也可能来自不同的证据,他们总是支持一种说法。然后,给孩子们提供了一个不同意的信息,或者他们自己的个人数据,这些数据与另一个罐子一致。孩子们对统计依赖性没有表现出敏感性,不管他们的证词是否独立,他们都会以等概率选择多数,但他们也会系统地高估自己的个人数据,比最优贝叶斯模型预测的更频繁地支持与他们自己的证据一致的罐子。相比之下,孩子们在一个类似的任务中做出了与这个模型一致的选择,在这个任务中,数据是在没有证词的情况下呈现给孩子的。我们的研究结果表明,幼儿将大多数人视为广泛的信息,但推断他人经历的挑战可能导致他们依赖于具体的、可见的证据,如果有的话。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Open Mind
Open Mind Social Sciences-Linguistics and Language
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
15
审稿时长
53 weeks
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