Columbia University in the City of New York

Mar 28, 20194:15 pm
Seminar

CANCELLED: Bayesian Brains Without Probabilities

Featuring Adam Sanborn, PhD, Associate Professor of Psychology, University of Warwick

March 28th, 4:15 pm – 5:30 pm at the Jerome L. Greene Science Center (9th floor lecture hall)

Register Here

**Please note that this seminar has been cancelled.**

Over the past two decades, a wave of Bayesian explanations has swept through cognitive science, explaining behavior in domains from intuitive physics and causal learning, to perception, motor control and language. Yet people produce stunningly incorrect answers in response to even the simplest questions about probabilities. How can a supposedly Bayesian brain paradoxically reason so poorly with probabilities? Perhaps Bayesian brains do not represent or calculate probabilities at all and are, indeed, poorly adapted to do so. Instead the brain could be approximating Bayesian inference through sampling: drawing samples from its distribution of likely hypotheses over time. Only with infinite samples does a Bayesian sampler conform to the laws of probability, and in this talk Dr. Sanborn will show how reasoning with a finite number of samples systematically generates classic probabilistic reasoning errors in individuals, upending the longstanding consensus on these effects. He will then present work testing whether people sample when producing numeric estimates, and discuss what kind of sampling algorithm the brain might be using.

This seminar is free with registration and will take place in the Jerome L. Greene Science Center (9th floor lecture hall) on Columbia's Manhattanville campus. All attendees must register in order to gain access to the Greene Science Center.

This seminar is part of the the Cognition and Decision Seminar Series, which is sponsored by the Program for Economic Research and the Center for Decision Sciences.

Venue: the Jerome L. Greene Science Center (9th floor lecture hall)
3227 Broadway, New York, NY 10027

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