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Within the domain of psychology, Optimal Experimental Design (OED) principles have been used to model how people seek and evaluate information. Despite proving valuable as computational-level methods to account for people's behaviour, their descriptive and explanatory powers remain largely unexplored. In a series of experiments, we used a naturalistic crime investigation scenario to examine how people evaluate queries, as well as outcomes, in probabilistic contexts. We aimed to uncover the psychological strategies that people use, not just to assess whether they deviated from OED principles. In addition, we explored the adaptiveness of the identified strategies across both one-shot and stepwise information search tasks. We found that people do not always evaluate queries strictly in OED terms and use distinct strategies, such as by identifying a leading contender at the outset. Moreover, we identified aspects of zero-sum thinking and risk aversion that interact with people's information search strategies. Our findings have implications for building a descriptive account of information seeking and evaluation, accounting for factors that currently lie outside the realm of information-theoretic OED measures, such as context and the learner's own preferences.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cogpsych.2020.101332 | DOI Listing |
BMJ Open
June 2025
Department of Public Health, Policy and Systems, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK
Objectives: Clinical trials are needed to advance interventions such as chemoprevention that have potential to reduce the risk of malignant transformation in individuals with oral potentially malignant disorders. We explored the perspectives of those screened or invited to join an early phase clinical trial (the SAVER trial: Sodium valproate for the epigenetic reprogramming of high-risk oral epithelial dysplasia). Our objectives were to inform the SAVER trial while it was ongoing and to provide insights for future trials and chemoprevention therapy development more broadly.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Nanomedicine
December 2020
Debina Diagnostics Inc., Newtown Square, PA, USA.
Background: There is a dire need for rapid diagnostic tests of high sensitivity, efficiency, and point-of-test reporting capability to mitigate lethal viral epidemic outbreaks.
Purpose: To develop a new operating system within the lateral flow assay (LFA) format for Ebola virus (EBOV), based on fluorescent nanodiamond particles (FNDP) nitrogen vacancy (NV) emitting near-infrared (NIR) light. Specifically, we aimed to detail technical issues and the feasibility of mobilizing FNDP-NV on nitrocellulose membranes (NCM) and capturing them at test and control lines.
Cogn Psychol
December 2020
Department of Experimental Psychology, University College London, UK.
Within the domain of psychology, Optimal Experimental Design (OED) principles have been used to model how people seek and evaluate information. Despite proving valuable as computational-level methods to account for people's behaviour, their descriptive and explanatory powers remain largely unexplored. In a series of experiments, we used a naturalistic crime investigation scenario to examine how people evaluate queries, as well as outcomes, in probabilistic contexts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Omega
March 2020
Geo-Energy Research Institute, College of Electromechanical Engineering, Qingdao University of Science and Technology, Qingdao 266061, China.
Nanoparticle (NP)-stabilized foam technology has found potential applications in CO enhanced oil recovery (EOR) and greenhouse gas geological storage practices and accordingly attracts lots of research interest. To screen the optimal formula for the satisfactory foam performance, orthogonal experimental design (OED) is used in this paper for the complex multifactor multilevel system consisting of five influential factors of NP size, surfactant concentration, NP concentration, temperature, and salinity at four different levels in the range of 7-40 nm, 0-0.15 wt %, 0-0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF