AI Article Synopsis

  • Humans are skilled at generalizing from past experiences, organizing events into coherent units, and relating them based on similarities, with temporal information playing a crucial role in this process.
  • The study investigates how people use temporal information in latent-cause inference, where participants identify the underlying "strain" of microbe stimuli they observe.
  • A "persistent" model, suggesting that recently inferred causes are likely to continue influencing subsequent observations, was found to explain participants' behavior better than other models, indicating its potential use in fields like computational psychiatry and neuroimaging.

Article Abstract

Humans have an outstanding ability to generalize from past experiences, which requires parsing continuously experienced events into discrete, coherent units, and relating them to similar past experiences. Time is a key element in this process; however, how temporal information is used in generalization remains unclear. Latent-cause inference provides a Bayesian framework for clustering experiences, by building a world model in which related experiences are generated by a shared cause. Here, we examine how temporal information is used in latent-cause inference, using a novel task in which participants see "microbe" stimuli and explicitly report the latent cause ("strain") they infer for each microbe. We show that humans incorporate time in their inference of latent causes, such that recently inferred latent causes are more likely to be inferred again. In particular, a "persistent" model, in which the latent cause inferred for one observation has a fixed probability of continuing to cause the next observation, explains the data significantly better than two other time-sensitive models, although extensive individual differences exist. We show that our task and this model have good psychometric properties, highlighting their potential use for quantifying individual differences in computational psychiatry or in neuroimaging studies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11493367PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/jocn_a_02231DOI Listing

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