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Mellenbergh | CUBE 219
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Evidence Accumulation: Race Models
Details
Jul 20 @ 10:00 CEST - Jul 20 @ 11:40 CEST
In-person session
Presentations
Evaluating the effects of response scale resolution on confidence judgements: A Multiple Threshold Race model approach
Abhay Alaukik, Brian Odegaard, Prof. Andrew Heathcote, Dr. Peter Kvam
Modeling the stop signal task: further results on the copula approach
Ms. Paria Jahansa, Hans Colonius, Dr. Adele Diederich
Examining the Psychological Significance of the Jumps in the Decision Process through Test-Retest Reliability Analysis
Mr. Mehdi Ebrahimi Mehr, Dr. Jamal Amani Rad
Is Evidence Accumulation Jumpy? A Lévy-Flight Model explains Fast Errors in Perceptual Decision Making
Andreas Voss
Bias Against Levy Flight: What Happens When We Misspecify Levy Flight as Diffusion Model?
Tuba Hato, Mr. Lukas Schumacher, Stefan Radev, Andreas Voss
Evidence Accumulation: Multi-Attributes, Multi-Responses, And Complexity
Details
Jul 20 @ 14:00 CEST - Jul 20 @ 15:40 CEST
In-person session
Presentations
A computational framework to account for visual attention in multi-attribute decisions
Amir Hosein Hadian Rasanan, Sebastian Gluth, Jorg Rieskamp
Cognitive models of multi-response choice
Kianté Fernandez, Fred Callaway, Dr. Uma Karmarkar, Prof. Ian Krajbich
Speed, accuracy, and complexity
Duarte Gonçalves
Value and contrast in evidence accumulation models
Damien Mayaux
Analyzing the Impact of Choice Complexity on Risky Choices
Maohua Nie, Sebastian Olschewski, Jorg Rieskamp
Philosophy & Theory
Details
Jul 21 @ 10:00 CEST - Jul 21 @ 11:00 CEST
In-person session
Presentations
Invariants of human behaviour revisited: Snapshot vs universal explanations in psychology
Aba Szollosi, Prof. Ben Newell, Chris Donkin
What makes formal modelling work?
Chris Donkin
Comparing Bayesian and non-Bayesian accounts of human confidence reports: A computational replication study
Cem Tabakci, Sebastian Hellmann, Dr. Manuel Rausch
Reinforcement Learning
Details
Jul 21 @ 11:40 CEST - Jul 21 @ 13:00 CEST
In-person session
Presentations
A two-drift race model of human habits
Ms. Charlotte Collingwood, Prof. Rafal Bogacz
Understanding the structure of fluctuations in decision making
Steven Miletić, Niek Stevenson, Prof. Birte Forstmann, Prof. Andrew Heathcote
Framing the Exploration-Exploitation Trade-Off: Distinguishing Between Minimizing Losses and Maximizing Gains
Mr. Ludwig Danwitz, Prof. Bettina von Helversen, Mrs. Ann Katrin Hosch, Prof. Lars Hornuf
How General Are Individual Differences in Exploration Strategies?
Dr. Mirko Thalmann, Kristin Witte, Dr. Eric Schulz
Reasoning
Details
Jul 21 @ 15:20 CEST - Jul 21 @ 16:40 CEST
In-person session
Presentations
Jumping to racial prejudice
Ms. Katharina Zimmermann, Nicole Cruz
Testing AI models as cognitive models for abstract reasoning development
Mr. Martin Ilić, Mr. Christopher Pinier, Dr. Michael D. Nunez, Claire E Stevenson
Disentangling conditional dependencies
Nicole Cruz, Michael Lee
Measuring Persuasion Without Measuring a Prior Belief: A New Application of Planned Missing Data Techniques
Mark Himmelstein, David Budescu
Social Cognition: Wisdom Of The Crowd
Details
Jul 22 @ 10:00 CEST - Jul 22 @ 11:20 CEST
In-person session
Presentations
Minds for Mobile Agents: A pedestrian model based on psychological principles
Dr. Niels Vanhasbroeck, Dr. Tessa Blanken, Prof. Denny Borsboom, Dr. Dora Matzke, Prof. Andrew Heathcote
Distribution Inference and Surface Tracing (DIST): A computational model of ensemble perception
Dr. Finnian Wort
Why two heads together are worse than apart: A context-based account of collaborative inhibition in memory search
Hemali Angne, Charlotte Cornell, Qiong Zhang
Using cognitive models to debias anchoring effects in wisdom of the crowd aggregation
Michael Lee, Lauren Montgomery, J. Manuel Villarreal, Ms. Annie Dang
Context Effects
Details
Jul 22 @ 11:40 CEST - Jul 22 @ 13:00 CEST
In-person session
Presentations
Testing context effects: How to have your cake and eat it, too
David Kellen, Mikhail Spektor
Testing the Additively Separable Representation of Utility Theories: An Experiment Evaluating Monotonicity, Transitivity, and Double Cancellation
Daniel Cavagnaro, Daniel W. Heck, Mr. Kiwon Song, Prof. Clintin Davis-Stober
The disjunction effect does not violate the Law of Total Probability
Alexandros Gelastopoulos, Prof. Gaël Le Mens
Memory & Perception
Details
Jul 22 @ 15:20 CEST - Jul 22 @ 17:00 CEST
In-person session
Presentations
A neural network model of free recall and its connection to neural machine translation
Mr. Nikolaus Salvatore, Qiong Zhang
Mental Sampling in Preferential Choice: Specifying the Sampling Algorithm
Jake Spicer, Mr. Yun-Xiao Li, Lucas Castillo, Johanna Falben, Dr. Stella Qian, Dr. Jian-Qiao Zhu, Nick Chater, Prof. Adam Sanborn
Integrating orthographic feature frequency with global matching models of recognition memory
Ms. Lyulei Zhang, Adam Frederick Osth
Tactile sensorimotor transformations are reliable over time, but do not generalise across tasks
Dr. Marlou Perquin, Prof. Christoph Kayser, Prof. Tobias Heed
Comparison of Markov and quantum walk models of bistable perception
Dr. Jerome Busemeyer, Mr. Adam Huang, Rong Zheng, Dr. Makiko Yamada