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), In Science Advances, volume 6, 2020.
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