心理学
社会学习
强化学习
任务(项目管理)
认知心理学
面子(社会学概念)
社会认知
认知科学
认知
社会心理学
人工智能
计算机科学
神经科学
经济
社会学
管理
社会科学
教育学
作者
Leor M. Hackel,David A. Kalkstein
标识
DOI:10.1177/09567976231180587
摘要
Humans often generalize rewarding experiences across abstract social roles. Theories of reward learning suggest that people generalize through model-based learning, but such learning is cognitively costly. Why do people seem to generalize across social roles with ease? Humans are social experts who easily recognize social roles that reflect familiar semantic concepts (e.g., “helper” or “teacher”). People may associate these roles with model-free reward (e.g., learning that helpers are rewarding), allowing them to generalize easily (e.g., interacting with novel individuals identified as helpers). In four online experiments with U.S. adults ( N = 577), we found evidence that social concepts ease complex learning (people generalize more and at faster speed) and that people attach reward directly to abstract roles (they generalize even when roles are unrelated to task structure). These results demonstrate how familiar concepts allow complex behavior to emerge from simple strategies, highlighting social interaction as a prototype for studying cognitive ease in the face of environmental complexity.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI