99 research outputs found

    La reproduction scolaire des inégalités sociales en France : Le cas des enfants précoces

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    Parmi les causes bien identifiées de la reproduction scolaire des inégalités sociales, plusieurs touchent plus particulièrement les enfants intellectuellement précoces. C'est le cas de l'adaptation des exigences scolaires en fonction du milieu social, du rapport au savoir chez les pairs, ou encore des styles parentaux. Pour des raisons en partie liées à une représentation politique et sociale de l'égalité, la société française a choisi de ne pas - ou peu - intervenir de façon spécifique auprès des enfants précoces dans le cadre éducatif. Ce défaut de prise en charge spécifique appuyer sur une rhétorique de l'égalité permet à l'ensemble des facteurs de discrimination sociale de jouer à plein, en créant dans la population des enfants intellectuellement précoces une augmentation particulièrement importante des inégalités sociales. C'est ce paradoxe que nous présentons ici, en croisant des résultats de sociologie de l'éducation et de psychologie

    Structure emerges faster during cultural transmission in children than in adults

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    How does children’s limited processing capacity affect cultural transmission of complex information? We show that over the course of iterated reproduction of two-dimensional random dot patterns transmission accuracy increased to a similar extent in 5- to 8-year-old children and adults whereas algorithmic complexity decreased faster in children. Thus, children require more structure to render complex inputs learnable. In line with the Less-Is-More hypothesis, we interpret this as evidence that children’s processing limitations affecting working memory capacity and executive control constrain the ability to represent and generate complexity, which, in turn, facilitates emergence of structure. This underscores the importance of investigating the role of children in the transmission of complex cultural traits

    Natural scene statistics mediate the perception of image complexity

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    Humans are sensitive to complexity and regularity in patterns. The subjective perception of pattern complexity is correlated to algorithmic (Kolmogorov-Chaitin) complexity as defined in computer science, but also to the frequency of naturally occurring patterns. However, the possible mediational role of natural frequencies in the perception of algorithmic complexity remains unclear. Here we reanalyze Hsu et al. (2010) through a mediational analysis, and complement their results in a new experiment. We conclude that human perception of complexity seems partly shaped by natural scenes statistics, thereby establishing a link between the perception of complexity and the effect of natural scene statistics

    The role of teaching in iterated language transmission

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    Adults are more efficient in creating and transmitting novel signalling systems than children

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    Iterated language learning experiments have shown that meaningful and structured signalling systems emerge when there is pressure for signals to be both learnable and expressive. Yet such experiments have mainly been conducted with adults using language-like signals. Here we explore whether structured signalling systems can also emerge when signalling domains are unfamiliar and when the learners are children with their well-attested cognitive and pragmatic limitations. In Experiment 1, we compared iterated learning of binary auditory sequences denoting small sets of meanings in chains of adults and 5-7-year old children. Signalling systems became more learnable even though iconicity and structure did not emerge despite applying a homonymy filter designed to keep the systems expressive. When the same types of signals were used in referential communication by adult and child dyads in Experiment 2, only the adults, but not the children, were able to negotiate shared iconic and structured signals. Referential communication using their native language by 4-5-year old children in Experiment 3 showed that only interaction with adults, but not with peers resulted in informative expressions. These findings suggest that emergence and transmission of communication systems is unlikely to be driven by children, and point to the importance of cognitive maturity and pragmatic expertise of learners as well as feedback-based scaffolding of communicative effectiveness by experts during language evolution

    Algorithmic complexity for psychology: A user-friendly implementation of the coding theorem method

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    Kolmogorov-Chaitin complexity has long been believed to be impossible to approximate when it comes to short sequences (e.g. of length 5-50). However, with the newly developed \emph{coding theorem method} the complexity of strings of length 2-11 can now be numerically estimated. We present the theoretical basis of algorithmic complexity for short strings (ACSS) and describe an R-package providing functions based on ACSS that will cover psychologists' needs and improve upon previous methods in three ways: (1) ACSS is now available not only for binary strings, but for strings based on up to 9 different symbols, (2) ACSS no longer requires time-consuming computing, and (3) a new approach based on ACSS gives access to an estimation of the complexity of strings of any length. Finally, three illustrative examples show how these tools can be applied to psychology.Comment: to appear in "Behavioral Research Methods", 14 pages in journal format, R package at http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/acss/index.htm

    A short note on number preference

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    Subjects usually show a preference for number 7 above any other in the bracket 0-9, at least in Europe and the USA. Two explanations (a cognitive one, and a cultural one) have been put forward as a bases for this "seven phenomenon". Here we advocate for a "reconciliation" between these two theories
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