Abstract
To explore how model building adapts to changing environments, we had participants play "rock-paper-scissors" against a computer that played a frequency bias or a player-dependent bias and then switched. Participants demonstrated their use of prior experience in how quickly they recognized and exploited changes in the computer's play strategy; in general, the more similar the strategies, the more efficient the updating. These findings inform our understanding of previously reported updating impairments in right-brain damaged patients.
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Stöttinger, E., Filipowicz, A., Danckert, J., & Anderson, B. (2014). The effects of prior learned strategies on updating an opponent’s strategy in the rock, paper, scissors game. Cognitive Science, 38(7), 1482–1492. https://doi.org/10.1111/cogs.12115
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