[PDF][PDF] Do I know that you know what you know? Modeling testimony in causal inference
Proceedings of the annual meeting of the cognitive science society, 2012•escholarship.org
We rely on both our own observations and on others' testimony when making causal
inferences. To integrate these sources of information we must consider an informant's
statements about the world, her expressed level of certainty, her previous accuracy, and
perhaps her apparent self-knowledge–how accurately she conveys her own certainty. It can
be difficult to tease apart the contributions of all these variables simply by observing people's
causal judgments. We present a computational account of how these different cues …
inferences. To integrate these sources of information we must consider an informant's
statements about the world, her expressed level of certainty, her previous accuracy, and
perhaps her apparent self-knowledge–how accurately she conveys her own certainty. It can
be difficult to tease apart the contributions of all these variables simply by observing people's
causal judgments. We present a computational account of how these different cues …
Abstract
We rely on both our own observations and on others’ testimony when making causal inferences. To integrate these sources of information we must consider an informant’s statements about the world, her expressed level of certainty, her previous accuracy, and perhaps her apparent self-knowledge–how accurately she conveys her own certainty. It can be difficult to tease apart the contributions of all these variables simply by observing people’s causal judgments. We present a computational account of how these different cues contribute to a rational causal inference, and two experiments looking at adults’ inferences from causal demonstrations and informant testimony, focusing on cases where these sources conflict. We find that adults are able to combine social information with their own observations, and are sensitive to the reliability of each. Adults are also sensitive to the accuracy, certainty, and selfknowledge of the informant, a result confirmed by comparing predictions from models with and without these variables.
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