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The Psychology of Human Entropy Intuitions

MPG-Autoren
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Schulz,  E
Research Group Computational Principles of Intelligence, Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics, Max Planck Society;

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Zitation

Bertram, L., Schulz, E., Hofer, M., & Nelson, J. (2020). The Psychology of Human Entropy Intuitions. In S. Denison, M. Mack, Y. Xu, & B. Armstrong (Eds.), 42nd Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society (CogSci 2020): 5Developing a Mind: Learning in Humans, Animals, and Machines (pp. 1457-1463). Red Hook, NY, USA: Curran. doi:10.23668/psycharchives.3016.


Zitierlink: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0006-926A-E
Zusammenfassung
A variety of conceptualizations of psychological uncertaintyexist. From an information-theoretic perspective, probabilisticuncertainty can be formalized as mathematical entropy. Cog-nitive emotion theories posit that uncertainty appraisals andmotivation to reduce uncertainty are modulated by emotionalstate. Yet little is known about how people evaluate proba-bilistic uncertainty, and about how emotional state modulatespeople’s evaluations of probabilistic uncertainty and behaviorto reduce probabilistic uncertainty. We tested intuitive entropyevaluations and entropy reduction strategies across four emo-tion conditions in the Entropy Mastermind game. We used theunified Sharma-Mittal space of entropy measures to quantifyparticipants’ entropy evaluations. Results suggest that manypeople use a heuristic strategy, focusing on the number of pos-sible outcomes, irrespective of the probabilities in the proba-bility distribution. This result is surprising, given that previouswork suggested that people are very sensitive to the maximumprobability when choosing queries on probabilistic classifica-tion tasks. Emotion induction generally increased participants’heuristic assessment. The uncertainty associated with emo-tional states also affected game play: participants needed fewerqueries and spent less time on games in high-uncertainty thanin low-uncertainty emotional states. Yet entropy perceptionswere not related to subjectively reported uncertainty, numer-acy or entropy knowledge, suggesting that entropy perceptionsmay form an independent psychological construct.