Infants Infer And Predict Coherent Event Interactions: Modeling Cognitive Development

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Abstract

Mental representations in infants are sparse and grow richer over development. Anticipatory eye fixation studies show that infants at around 7 months start to predict the goal of an observed action, e.g., an object targeted by a reaching hand. Interestingly, goal-predictive gaze shifts occur at an earlier age when the (animate) hand subsequently manipulates an object and later when an action is performed by an inanimate actor, e.g., a mechanical claw. We introduce CAPRI² (Cognitive Action PRediction and Inference in Infants), a computational model that explains this development from a functional, algorithmic perspective. It is based on the theory that infants learn object files and events as they develop a physical reasoning system. In particular, CAPRI² learns a generative event-predictive model, which it uses to both interpret sensory information and infer goal-directed behavior.When observing object interactions, CAPRI² (i) interprets the unfolding interactions in terms of event-segmented dynamics, (ii) maximizes the coherence of its event interpretations, and (iii) chooses actions for minimizing anticipated uncertainty. As a result, CAPRI² mimics the developmental pathway of infants' goal-predictive gaze behavior. Our modeling work suggests that the involved event-predictive representations, longer-term generative model learning, and shorter-term instantaneous, retrospective, and active inference principles constitute fundamental building blocks for the effective development of goal-predictive capacities.

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License: CC-BY-4.0