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  3. Gal Raz Thesis Defense: Understanding and Accelerating Looking Time Studies
Gal Raz Thesis Defense: Understanding and Accelerating Looking Time Studies
Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences (BCS)

Gal Raz Thesis Defense: Understanding and Accelerating Looking Time Studies

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Add to CalendarAmerica/New_YorkGal Raz Thesis Defense: Understanding and Accelerating Looking Time Studies09/05/2024 10:00 am09/05/2024 10:00 amBuilding 46,3310
September 5, 2024
10:00 am
Location
Building 46,3310
Contact
jugale@mit.edu
    Description

    Location: Picower Seminar Room (46-3310) 

    Date: Sep 5 at 10am ET

    Zoom link: https://mit.zoom.us/my/galraz

     

    Talk title: Understanding and Accelerating Looking Time Studies

     

    Abstract: 

    From birth, infants actively control their attention. Developmental psychologists have long capitalized on this fact, probing infants' mental representations through their looking behavior. Despite being a key measure, we do not have a rigorous, formal framework for why infants look longer at some stimuli than others. To address this, we developed a rational learning model that decides how long to look at sequences of stimuli based on its expectation to gain information. By using a CNN-derived embedding space, the model can operate on raw images and generate novel predictions for previously untested stimuli. We validate these predictions by collecting large infant looking time datasets (total n=261), and find that indeed our model captures key elements of infant looking behavior. We argue that our model is a general and interpretable framework for the rational analysis of looking time. 

     

    A central limitation in evaluating computational models of infant cognition, like ours, is the availability of data. Both data collection and data annotation are slow, so testing models’ fine-grained predictions about infants’ behavior is costly. To address these bottlenecks, we developed and evaluated an automated workflow which uses parent control, asynchronous testing and automatic annotation of videos. We tested this automated workflow (n=134), using a classic violation-of-expectation effect: that infant look longer at agents taking inefficient actions, compared to efficient actions. We are able to replicate this finding and find that our method achieves effect sizes comparable to those observed in lab and through synchronous remote testing, but with about 15x faster data acquisition. We hope that adoption of our automated workflow will help researchers collect larger samples and make the study of infant cognition a more robust, cumulative science.

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