by C. Kidd, Steven T. Piantadosi and R.N. Aslin
Reference:
The Goldilocks Effect: Human Infants Allocate Attention to Visual Sequences That Are Neither Too Simple Nor Too Complex (C. Kidd, Steven T. Piantadosi and R.N. Aslin), In PLoS ONE, 2012.
Bibtex Entry:
@article{kidd2012goldilocks,
title = {The {G}oldilocks Effect: Human Infants Allocate Attention to Visual Sequences That Are Neither Too Simple Nor Too Complex},
author = {C. Kidd and Steven T. Piantadosi and R.N. Aslin},
year = {2012},
journal = {PLoS ONE},
url = {https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0036399},
mycategories = {lab,personal},
tags={modeling, development, informationtheory},
eli5={Infants show U-shaped attentional preferences where they tend to look away from things that are too complex, or too simple.}
}