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Herding cats: children's intuitive theories of persuasion predict slower collective decisions in larger and more diverse groups, but disregard factional power.

, , , и . CogSci, cognitivesciencesociety.org, (2023)

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Know your network: people infer cultural drift from network structure, and expect collaborating with more distant experts to improve innovation, but collaborating with network-neighbors to improve memory., , и . CogSci, cognitivesciencesociety.org, (2022)Agenda setting and The Emperor's New Clothes: people infer that letting powerful agents make their opinion known early can trigger information cascades and pluralistic ignorance., , и . CogSci, cognitivesciencesociety.org, (2023)Herding cats: children's intuitive theories of persuasion predict slower collective decisions in larger and more diverse groups, but disregard factional power., , , и . CogSci, cognitivesciencesociety.org, (2023)You can't trust an angry group: asymmetric evaluations of angry and surprised rhetoric affect confidence in trending opinions., и . CogSci, cognitivesciencesociety.org, (2021)Does informational independence always matter? Children believe small group discussion is more accurate than ten times as many independent informants., и . CogSci, cognitivesciencesociety.org, (2020)Children use agents' response time to distinguish between memory and novel inference., и . CogSci, cognitivesciencesociety.org, (2020)"He only changed his answer because they shouted at him": children use affective cues to distinguish between genuine and forced consensus., и . CogSci, cognitivesciencesociety.org, (2022)You must know something I don't: risky behavior implies privileged information., и . CogSci, стр. 3345. cognitivesciencesociety.org, (2019)