Recursive sequence generation in monkeys, children, US adults, and native Amazonians (bibtex)
by Stephen Ferrigno, Samuel J. Cheyette, Steven T. Piantadosi and Jessica F. Cantlon
Reference:
Recursive sequence generation in monkeys, children, US adults, and native Amazonians. Stephen Ferrigno, Samuel J. Cheyette, Steven T. Piantadosi and Jessica F. Cantlon, Science Advances, volume 6.
Bibtex Entry:
@article{ferrigno2020recursive,
  title={Recursive sequence generation in monkeys, children, US adults, and native Amazonians},
  author={Stephen Ferrigno and Samuel J. Cheyette and Steven T. Piantadosi and Jessica F. Cantlon},
  journal={Science Advances},
  year={2020},
  volume={6},
  number={26},
  url={https://advances.sciencemag.org/content/6/26/eaaz1002},
  eli5={Humans really like to make recursive generalizations; monkeys will, but less so.},
  tags={number,crosscultural,development,modeling}
}
Powered by bibtexbrowser