The Goldilocks Effect: Infants' preference for visual stimuli that are neither too predictable nor too surprising (bibtex)
by Kidd, C., Piantadosi, Steven T. and Aslin, R.N.
Reference:
The Goldilocks Effect: Infants' preference for visual stimuli that are neither too predictable nor too surprising (Kidd, C., Piantadosi, Steven T. and Aslin, R.N.), In Proceedings of the Cognitive Science Society, 2010.
Bibtex Entry:
@inproceedings{kiddgoldilocks,
  title = {The {G}oldilocks Effect: Infants' preference for visual stimuli that are neither too predictable nor too surprising},
  author = {Kidd, C. and Piantadosi, Steven T. and Aslin, R.N.},
  booktitle = {{Proceedings of the Cognitive Science Society}},
  year = {2010},
  url = {http://colala.berkeley.edu/papers/KiddPiantadosiAslin-Cogsci2010.pdf},
  mycategories = {lab,personal},
  tags={modeling, language, number, development},
  eli5={Infants show U-shaped attentional preferences where they tend to look away from things that are too complex, or too simple.}
}
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