Dear members of this mail list,
please disregard my mail, it was meant to be sent to our department only. :)
have a nice weekend.
Kati
Katalin Illes
Coordinator
Cognitive Development Center
-------------------------------------------
Central European University
[cid:886F305F-E695-4050-812F-CF271316DCA2]
CENTRAL EUROPEAN UNIVERSITY
H-1051 Budapest,Oktober 6 u. 7.
tel: (36-1) 328-3674
mail: IllesK@ceu.edu<mailto:IllesK@ceu.edu>
http://www.ceu.edu
On 2017. Jul 14., at 13:20, Katalin Illes
<IllesK@ceu.edu<mailto:IllesK@ceu.edu>> wrote:
Dear All,
Please sign
up<http://doodle.com/poll/srfvgpbbmzqzzxw8> for dinner with Julian
Jara-Ettinger on next Wednesday.
Have a nice weekend,
Kati
Katalin Illes
Coordinator
Cognitive Development Center
-------------------------------------------
Central European University
<unknown.jpg>
CENTRAL EUROPEAN UNIVERSITY
H-1051 Budapest,Oktober 6 u. 7.
tel: (36-1) 328-3674
mail: IllesK@ceu.edu<mailto:IllesK@ceu.edu>
http://www.ceu.edu<http://www.ceu.edu/>
On 2017. Jul 13., at 10:21, Katarina Begus
<katarina.begus@gmail.com<mailto:katarina.begus@gmail.com>> wrote:
Dear all,
The CEU Department of Cognitive Science cordially invites you to its talk (please note the
change in location!):
Julian Jara-Ettinger (MIT)
Date: Wednesday, July 19th, 2017 – 17:00-18:30
Host: Gergo Csibra
Location - CHANGED: Nador 15, Room 103.
The inner life of goals: costs, rewards, and commonsense psychology
By kindergarten, our knowledge of agents has unfolded into a powerful intuitive theory
that enables us to thrive in our social world. In this talk I will propose that children
build their commonsense psychology around a basic assumption that agents choose goals and
actions by quantifying, comparing, and maximizing utilities. This naïve utility calculus
captures much of the rich social reasoning we engage in from early childhood. I explore
this theory in a series of experiments looking at children's ability to infer costs
and rewards given partial information, their reasoning about knowledgeable versus ignorant
agents, their ability to interpret ambiguous utterances, and their reasoning about the
moral status of agents. Moreover, a formal model of this theory, embedded in a Bayesian
framework, predicts with quantitative accuracy how humans make cost and reward
attributions. The theory also offers insights into a range of other phenomena in
commonsense psychology that, on the surface, do not appear to involve utility
maximization.
See more at:
http://web.mit.edu/jjara/www/
We look forward to seeing you there!
Cognitive Science Events at CEU:
http://cognitivescience.ceu.edu/events
--
Katarina Begus
Post-Doctoral Research Fellow
Cognitive Development Center
Central European University
Budapest, Hungary
+36 1 327 3000 / 2777
https://cognitivescience.ceu.edu/people/katarina-begus
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