Modeling Cognitive Strategies in Teaching

Abstract

Teaching is a complex social behavior that sometimes results from goal-directed processing. However, goal-directed teaching is cognitively demanding since it requires actively assessing and correcting gaps in a learner's knowledge. When do people teach using such mentally effortful strategies versus falling back on more cognitively frugal ones? Here, we investigated this question using a combination of novel behavioral experiments and computational theory. We found robust individual differences in people's teaching strategies: some participants spontaneously teach using high-effort processing (e.g., Bayesian theory of mind and model-based planning) while others engage in low-effort processing (e.g., model-free heuristics). Our results and analyses provide a novel demonstration of how people engage in planning versus heuristics when teaching, as well as how people adapt processing to avoid mental effort in social interactions.

Cite

Text

Harootonian et al. "Modeling Cognitive Strategies in Teaching." NeurIPS 2024 Workshops: IMOL, 2024.

Markdown

[Harootonian et al. "Modeling Cognitive Strategies in Teaching." NeurIPS 2024 Workshops: IMOL, 2024.](https://mlanthology.org/neuripsw/2024/harootonian2024neuripsw-modeling/)

BibTeX

@inproceedings{harootonian2024neuripsw-modeling,
  title     = {{Modeling Cognitive Strategies in Teaching}},
  author    = {Harootonian, Sevan K and Niv, Yael and Griffiths, Thomas L. and Ho, Mark K},
  booktitle = {NeurIPS 2024 Workshops: IMOL},
  year      = {2024},
  url       = {https://mlanthology.org/neuripsw/2024/harootonian2024neuripsw-modeling/}
}