0000000000281452

AUTHOR

Janne V. Kujala

showing 49 related works from this author

Testing for selectivity in the dependence of random variables on external factors

2008

Random variables AA and BB, whose joint distribution depends on factors (x,y)(x,y), are selectively influenced by xx and yy, respectively, if AA and BB can be represented as functions of, respectively, (x,SA,C)(x,SA,C) and (y,SB,C)(y,SB,C), where SA,SB,CSA,SB,C are stochastically independent and do not depend on (x,y)(x,y). Selective influence implies selective dependence of marginal distributions on the respective factors: thus no parameter of AA may depend on yy. But parameters characterizing stochastic interdependence of AA and BB, such as their mixed moments, are generally functions of both xx and yy. We derive two simple necessary conditions for selective dependence of (A,B)(A,B) on (x…

CombinatoricsCrystallographyJoint probability distributionApplied MathematicsSelectivityRandom variableGeneral PsychologyMathematicsJournal of Mathematical Psychology
researchProduct

On minima of discrimination functions

2008

Abstract A discrimination function ψ ( x , y ) assigns a measure of discriminability to stimulus pairs x , y (e.g., the probability with which they are judged to be different in a same-different judgment scheme). If for every x there is a single y least discriminable from x , then this y is called the point of subjective equality (PSE) for x , and the dependence h ( x ) of the PSE for x on x is called a PSE function. The PSE function g ( y ) is defined in a symmetrically opposite way. If the graphs of the two PSE functions coincide (i.e.,  g ≡ h − 1 ), the function is said to satisfy the Regular Minimality law. The minimum level functions are restrictions of ψ to the graphs of the PSE funct…

Maxima and minimaDiscrete mathematicsPerceptual discriminationApplied MathematicsDiscrimination functionGeneral PsychologyMathematicsCounterexampleJournal of Mathematical Psychology
researchProduct

Bayesian Modelling of Confusability of Phoneme-Grapheme Connections

2007

Deficiencies in the ability to map letters to sounds are currently considered to be the most likely early signs of dyslexia. This has motivated the use of Literate, a computer game for training this skill, in several Finnish schools and households as a tool in the early prevention of reading disability. In this paper, we present a Bayesian model that uses a student's performance in a game like Literate to infer which phoneme-grapheme connections student currently confuses with each other. This information can be used to adapt the game to a particular student's skills as well as to provide information about the student's learning progress to their parents and teachers. We apply our model to …

Reading disabilityComputer sciencebusiness.industryBayesian probabilityDyslexiaGraphemecomputer.software_genreBayesian inferencemedicine.diseasemedicineArtificial intelligencebusinesscomputerNatural language processingNatural languageSeventh IEEE International Conference on Advanced Learning Technologies (ICALT 2007)
researchProduct

Regular Minimality and Thurstonian-type modeling

2009

Abstract A Thurstonian-type model for pairwise comparisons is any model in which the response (e.g., “they are the same” or “they are different”) to two stimuli being compared depends, deterministically or probabilistically, on the realizations of two randomly varying representations (perceptual images) of these stimuli. The two perceptual images in such a model may be stochastically interdependent but each has to be selectively dependent on its stimulus. It has been previously shown that all possible discrimination probability functions for same–different comparisons can be generated by Thurstonian-type models of the simplest variety, with independent percepts and deterministic decision ru…

Discrete mathematicsApplied Mathematicsmedia_common.quotation_subjectHausdorff spaceMultivariate normal distributionDecision ruleMaxima and minimaSymmetric relationPerceptionEuclidean geometryPairwise comparisonGeneral Psychologymedia_commonMathematicsJournal of Mathematical Psychology
researchProduct

Fillets:Cues for connections in Focus+Context views of graph-like diagrams

2003

We apply fillets-smoothing of sharp angles at the joints-between the connections and nodes of graph-like diagrams. In situations where the graph layout is constrained, e.g. Focus+Context views or views where the coordinates of the nodes are informative, fillets can clarify the relationships considerably without altering the layout. A visual search experiment supports our hypothesis that with fillets it is considerably easier to perceive node-connection structures. We discuss algorithms with different tradeoffs for flexibility and performance for rendering these connections in a single pass using OpenGL.

Visual searchTheoretical computer scienceComputer scienceBooksOpenGLGraph LayoutGraph theoryInformation technologyComputer scienceMechanical engineeringSmoothing methodsRendering (computer graphics)Computer graphicsTree graphsGraph (abstract data type)HumansInformation systemsInkConnectorsSmoothing
researchProduct

Children's engagement during digital game-based learning of reading: The effects of time, rewards, and challenge

2014

This study investigated the effects of two game features (the level of challenge and the reward system) on first and second graders' engagement during digital game-based learning of reading. We were particularly interested in determining how well these features managed to maintain children's engagement over the 8-week training period. The children (N = 138) used GraphoGame, a web-based game training letter-sound connections, at home under the supervision of parents. Data regarding the children's gaming and engagement were stored on the GraphoGame online server. A 2 x 2 factorial design was used to investigate the effects of the level of challenge (high challenge vs. high success) and the pr…

General Computer Sciencemedia_common.quotation_subjecteducationApplied psychologyComputingMilieux_PERSONALCOMPUTINGPrimary educationGame based learningSession (web analytics)EducationReward systemReading (process)Duration (project management)Set (psychology)Psychologyhuman activitiesSocial psychologyta515Training periodmedia_commonComputers and Education
researchProduct

In search of a science-based application: A learning tool for reading acquisition

2009

This is a story about the fate of a psychological application: from its conception to the optimistic vision surrounding its future. We hope that this application - an enjoyable learning game (www or mobile phone-based, available free of charge to the end users) for children - can at best help millions of children in their reading acquisition in the future. Its basis was created by following intensively the development of children with (N = 107) and without (N = 92) genetic (familial) risk for dyslexia from birth to puberty in the Jyväskylä Longitudinal study of Dyslexia (JLD)-project. We summarize some of the major findings of the JLD in order to facilitate understanding of the reasons and …

Longitudinal studymedia_common.quotation_subjectApplied psychologyMEDLINEDyslexiaChild DevelopmentArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Reading (process)Developmental and Educational PsychologymedicineHumansLearningLanguage Development DisordersLongitudinal StudiesChildGeneral Psychologymedia_commonEnd userDyslexiaInfantGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseChild developmentReadingChild PreschoolPsychologyCognitive psychologyScandinavian Journal of Psychology
researchProduct

A Probabilistic Approach to Pronunciation by Analogy

2011

The relationship between written and spoken words is convoluted in languages with a deep orthography such as English and therefore it is difficult to devise explicit rules for generating the pronunciations for unseen words. Pronunciation by analogy (PbA) is a data-driven method of constructing pronunciations for novel words from concatenated segments of known words and their pronunciations. PbA performs relatively well with English and outperforms several other proposed methods. However, the best published word accuracy of 65.5% (for the 20,000 word NETtalk corpus) suggests there is much room for improvement in it. Previous PbA algorithms have used several different scoring strategies such …

FOS: Computer and information sciencesComputer Science - Computation and Language68T50Computation and Language (cs.CL)
researchProduct

On Contextuality in Behavioral Data

2015

Dzhafarov, Zhang, and Kujala (Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. A 374, 20150099) reviewed several behavioral data sets imitating the formal design of the quantum-mechanical contextuality experiments. The conclusion was that none of these data sets exhibited contextuality if understood in the generalized sense proposed in Dzhafarov, Kujala, and Larsson (Found. Phys. 7, 762-782, 2015), while the traditional definition of contextuality does not apply to these data because they violate the condition of consistent connectedness (also known as marginal selectivity, no-signaling condition, no-disturbance principle, etc.). In this paper we clarify the relationship between (in)consistent connectedness and (non…

Computer scienceGeneral MathematicsFOS: Physical sciencesGeneral Physics and Astronomy01 natural sciences050105 experimental psychology0103 physical sciences0501 psychology and cognitive sciencescontextuality010306 general physicsta515Cognitive scienceQuantum Physics05 social sciencesta111General Engineeringcyclic systemsArticlesKochen–Specker theorem81P13 81Q99 60A99 81P13 81Q99 60A99 81P13 81Q99 60A99Formal designFOS: Biological sciencesQuantitative Biology - Neurons and Cognitionconsistent connectednessNeurons and Cognition (q-bio.NC)Quantum Physics (quant-ph)
researchProduct

Proof of a Conjecture on Contextuality in Cyclic Systems with Binary Variables

2015

We present a proof for a conjecture previously formulated by Dzhafarov, Kujala, and Larsson (Foundations of Physics, in press, arXiv:1411.2244). The conjecture specifies a measure for the degree of contextuality and a criterion (necessary and sufficient condition) for contextuality in a broad class of quantum systems. This class includes Leggett-Garg, EPR/Bell, and Klyachko-Can-Binicioglu-Shumovsky type systems as special cases. In a system of this class certain physical properties $q_{1},...,q_{n}$ are measured in pairs $(q_{i},q_{j})$; every property enters in precisely two such pairs; and each measurement outcome is a binary random variable. Denoting the measurement outcomes for a proper…

PhysicsQuantum PhysicsConjectureDegree (graph theory)Probability (math.PR)05 social sciencesBinary random variableFOS: Physical sciencesGeneral Physics and AstronomyBinary numberType (model theory)01 natural sciencesMeasure (mathematics)050105 experimental psychologyCombinatorics0103 physical sciencesFOS: Mathematics0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesQuantum Physics (quant-ph)81P13 81Q99 60A99010306 general physicsRandom variableMathematics - ProbabilityFoundations of Physics
researchProduct

Exact limiting solutions for certain deterministic traffic rules

2001

liikennesäännöt
researchProduct

Contextuality-by-Default 2.0: Systems with Binary Random Variables

2017

The paper outlines a new development in the Contextuality-by-Default theory as applied to finite systems of binary random variables. The logic and principles of the original theory remain unchanged, but the definition of contextuality of a system of random variables is now based on multimaximal rather than maximal couplings of the variables that measure the same property in different contexts: a system is considered noncontextual if these multimaximal couplings are compatible with the distributions of the random variables sharing contexts. A multimaximal coupling is one that is a maximal coupling of any subset (equivalently, of any pair) of the random variables being coupled. Arguments are …

CouplingProperty (philosophy)010308 nuclear & particles physicsGeneralizationBinary number01 natural sciencesMeasure (mathematics)Kochen–Specker theoremDevelopment (topology)0103 physical sciencesStatistical physics010306 general physicsRandom variableMathematics
researchProduct

No-Forcing and No-Matching Theorems for Classical Probability Applied to Quantum Mechanics

2013

Correlations of spins in a system of entangled particles are inconsistent with Kolmogorov's probability theory (KPT), provided the system is assumed to be non-contextual. In the Alice-Bob EPR paradigm, non-contextuality means that the identity of Alice's spin (i.e., the probability space on which it is defined as a random variable) is determined only by the axis \alphai chosen by Alice, irrespective of Bob's axis \betaj (and vice versa). Here, we study contextual KPT models, with two properties: (1) Alice's and Bob's spins are identified as Aij and Bij, even though their distributions are determined by, respectively, \alphai alone and \betaj alone, in accordance with the no-signaling requir…

PhysicsQuantum Physics010308 nuclear & particles physicsProbability (math.PR)Zero (complex analysis)General Physics and AstronomyFOS: Physical sciencesCharacterization (mathematics)Computer Science::Computational Complexity60A99 81P1301 natural sciencesCombinatoricsIdentity (mathematics)Probability theoryJoint probability distribution0103 physical sciencesFOS: MathematicsBeta (velocity)010306 general physicsQuantum Physics (quant-ph)Random variableMathematics - ProbabilitySpin-½
researchProduct

Probabilistic foundations of contextuality

2017

Contextuality is usually defined as absence of a joint distribution for a set of measurements (random variables) with known joint distributions of some of its subsets. However, if these subsets of measurements are not disjoint, contextuality is mathematically impossible even if one generally allows (as one must) for random variables not to be jointly distributed. To avoid contradictions one has to adopt the Contextuality-by-Default approach: measurements made in different contexts are always distinct and stochastically unrelated to each other. Contextuality is reformulated then in terms of the (im)possibility of imposing on all the measurements in a system a joint distribution of a particul…

Pure mathematics(in)consistent connectednessmultimaximal couplingProperty (philosophy)Computer scienceGeneralizationFOS: Physical sciencesGeneral Physics and AstronomyDisjoint sets01 natural sciences050105 experimental psychologykontekstuaalisuusJoint probability distribution0103 physical sciencesFOS: Mathematicscontextuality0501 psychology and cognitive sciencescyclic systemcoupling010306 general physicsQuantum Physicskytkentäta114Probability (math.PR)ta11105 social sciencesProbabilistic logic16. Peace & justiceCoupling (probability)Kochen–Specker theoremQuantum Physics (quant-ph)81P13 81Q99 60A99Random variableMathematics - ProbabilityFortschritte der Physik
researchProduct

An electrophysiological study of print processing in kindergarten: the contribution of the visual n1 as a predictor of reading outcome.

2013

Sensitivity to print is characterized by a left occipito-temporal negativity to words in the event-related potential N1. This sensitivity is modulated by reading skills and may thus represent a neural marker of reading competence. Here we studied the development of the N1 in regular and poor readers from preschool age to school age to test whether the amplitude of the N1 predicts children's reading outcomes. Our results suggest a predictive value of the print-sensitive negativity over the right hemisphere. Whether this N1 may serve as a biomarker to improve prognosis in preliterate children should be clarified in future studies.

MaleFuture studiesTime FactorsVisual N1610 Medicine & healthta6121NeuroimagingDevelopmental psychology3206 Neuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyChild DevelopmentMental ProcessesPredictive Value of TestsDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyHumansta516Longitudinal Studies10064 Neuroscience Center ZurichRight hemisphereChildCompetence (human resources)Evoked Potentialsta515ta113Preschool child3204 Developmental and Educational PsychologyBrain MappingSchool age child10093 Institute of PsychologyElectroencephalography10058 Department of Child and Adolescent PsychiatryPredictive valueTemporal LobeElectrophysiologyNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyPattern Recognition VisualReading10076 Center for Integrative Human PhysiologyCase-Control Studies570 Life sciences; biologyFemaleOccipital Lobe150 PsychologyPsychologyDevelopmental neuropsychology
researchProduct

Contextuality-by-Default: A Brief Overview of Ideas, Concepts, and Terminology

2015

This paper is a brief overview of the concepts involved in measuring the degree of contextuality and detecting contextuality in systems of binary measurements of a finite number of objects. We discuss and clarify the main concepts and terminology of the theory called "contextuality-by-default," and then discuss a possible generalization of the theory from binary to arbitrary measurements.

Quantum PhysicsProbability (math.PR)FOS: MathematicsFOS: Physical sciencesQuantum Physics (quant-ph)81P13 81Q99 60A99Mathematics - Probability
researchProduct

Contextuality Analysis of the Double Slit Experiment (With a Glimpse Into Three Slits)

2018

The Contextuality-by-Default theory is illustrated on contextuality analysis of the idealized double-slit experiment. The experiment is described by a system of contextually labeled binary random variables each of which answers the question: has the particle hit the detector, having passed through a given slit (left or right) in a given state (open or closed)? This system of random variables is a cyclic system of rank 4, formally the same as the system describing the EPR/Bell paradigm with signaling. Unlike the latter, however, the system describing the double-slit experiment is always noncontextual, i.e., the context-dependence in it is entirely explainable in terms of direct influences of…

Rank (linear algebra)inconsistent connectednessGeneral Physics and AstronomyFOS: Physical scienceslcsh:Astrophysics01 natural sciencesArticledirect influencesProbability theoryRealizabilitylcsh:QB460-4660103 physical sciencesFOS: MathematicscontextualitykvanttimekaniikkaStatistical physicslcsh:Science010306 general physicskvanttiteoriadouble-slitMathematicsQuantum Physicstriple-slitta114010308 nuclear & particles physicsta111Probability (math.PR)Observablecontext-dependencelcsh:QC1-999Constraint (information theory)Double-slit experimentcontext-dependence; contextuality; direct influences; double-slit; inconsistent connectedness; signaling; triple-slitlcsh:QMarginal distributiontodennäköisyyssignalingQuantum Physics (quant-ph)81P13 81Q99 60A99Random variablelcsh:PhysicsMathematics - Probability
researchProduct

On computation in statistical models with a psychophysical application

2004

FM Janne Kujalan tieteellisen laskennan väitöskirjan ”On computation in statistical models with a psychophysical application” (Laskennasta tilastollisissa malleissa psykofysiikkaan soveltaen) tarkastustilaisuus. Vastaväittäjänä FT Keijo Ruotsalainen (Oulun yliopisto) ja kustoksena professori Pekka Neittaanmäki.Kujala tehosti väitöskirjatutkimuksessaan tilastollisten ja fysikaalisten mallien laskentaa. Vaikka erinäisiin ongelmiin voidaan varsin helposti keksiä laskennallisia malleja, niiden käyttäminen ja vertailu on usein käytännössä mahdotonta tietokoneiden rajallisen tehon takia. Kujala etsi työssään vähemmän tehoa vaativia oikoteitä laskennallisten mallien käyttöön. Esimerkiksi kahden no…

mallintaminenMonte Carlo -menetelmätlaskennalliset menetelmätpsykofysiikkamallittilastolliset mallit
researchProduct

Testing Selective Influence Directly Using Trackball Movement Tasks

2018

Systems factorial technology (SFT; Townsend & Nozawa, 1995) is regarded as a useful tool to diagnose if features (or dimensions) of the investigated stimulus are processed in a parallel or serial fashion. In order to use SFT, one has to assume the speed to process each feature is influenced by that feature only, termed as selective influence (Sternberg, 1969). This assumption is usually untestable as the processing time for a stimulus feature is not observable. Stochastic dominance is traditionally used as an indirect evidence for selective influence (e.g., Townsend & Fifi\'c, 2004). However, one should keep in mind that selective influence may be violated even when stochastic dominance hol…

FOS: Computer and information sciencesQuantitative Biology - Neurons and CognitionFOS: Biological sciencesApplications (stat.AP)Neurons and Cognition (q-bio.NC)Statistics - Applications
researchProduct

Adaptive design optimization: a mutual information-based approach to model discrimination in cognitive science.

2010

Discriminating among competing statistical models is a pressing issue for many experimentalists in the field of cognitive science. Resolving this issue begins with designing maximally informative experiments. To this end, the problem to be solved in adaptive design optimization is identifying experimental designs under which one can infer the underlying model in the fewest possible steps. When the models under consideration are nonlinear, as is often the case in cognitive science, this problem can be impossible to solve analytically without simplifying assumptions. However, as we show in this letter, a full solution can be found numerically with the help of a Bayesian computational trick d…

Optimal designCognitive scienceModels StatisticalArtificial neural networkbusiness.industryCognitive NeuroscienceDesign of experimentsBayesian probabilityPosterior probabilityStatistical modelBayes TheoremMutual informationDensity estimationCognitionDiscrimination PsychologicalArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Nonlinear DynamicsResearch DesignHumansComputer SimulationArtificial intelligencebusinessMathematicsNeural computation
researchProduct

Erratum to “Testing for selectivity in the dependence of random variables on external factors” [J. Math. Psych. 52 (2008) 128–144]

2010

Discrete mathematicsApplied MathematicsRandom variableGeneral PsychologyMathematicsJournal of Mathematical Psychology
researchProduct

Obtaining the best value for money in adaptive sequential estimation

2010

Abstract In [Kujala, J. V., Richardson, U., & Lyytinen, H. (2010). A Bayesian-optimal principle for learner-friendly adaptation in learning games. Journal of Mathematical Psychology , 54(2), 247–255], we considered an extension of the conventional Bayesian adaptive estimation framework to situations where each observable variable is associated with a certain random cost of observation. We proposed an algorithm that chooses each placement by maximizing the expected gain in utility divided by the expected cost. In this paper, we formally justify this placement rule as an asymptotically optimal solution to the problem of maximizing the expected utility of an experiment that terminates when the…

Mathematical psychologySequential estimationMathematical optimizationTotal costActive learning (machine learning)Computer scienceApplied MathematicsDecision theory05 social sciencesBayesian probability050105 experimental psychology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineAsymptotically optimal algorithm0501 psychology and cognitive sciences030217 neurology & neurosurgeryGeneral PsychologyExpected utility hypothesisJournal of Mathematical Psychology
researchProduct

Estimation and visualization of confusability matrices from adaptive measurement data

2010

Abstract We present a simple but effective method based on Luce’s choice axiom [Luce, R.D. (1959). Individual choice behavior: A theoretical analysis. New York: John Wiley & Sons] for consistent estimation of the pairwise confusabilities of items in a multiple-choice recognition task with arbitrarily chosen choice-sets. The method combines the exact (non-asymptotic) Bayesian way of assessing uncertainty with the unbiasedness emphasized in the classical frequentist approach. We apply the method to data collected using an adaptive computer game designed for prevention of reading disability. A player’s estimated confusability of phonemes (or more accurately, phoneme–grapheme connections) and l…

Computer sciencebusiness.industryApplied MathematicsBayesian probabilityConfusion matrixMachine learningcomputer.software_genreComputer gameVisualizationBayesian statisticsFrequentist inferencePairwise comparisonArtificial intelligencebusinesscomputerAlgorithmGeneral PsychologyAxiomJournal of Mathematical Psychology
researchProduct

Is there contextuality in behavioural and social systems?

2015

Most behavioral and social experiments aimed at revealing contextuality are confined to cyclic systems with binary outcomes. In quantum physics, this broad class of systems includes as special cases Klyachko-Can-Binicioglu-Shumovsky-type, Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen-Bell-type, and Suppes-Zanotti-Leggett-Garg-type systems. The theory of contextuality known as Contextuality-by-Default allows one to define and measure contextuality in all such system, even if there are context-dependent errors in measurements, or if something in the contexts directly interacts with the measurements. This makes the theory especially suitable for behavioral and social systems, where direct interactions of "everythin…

Matching (statistics)Class (set theory)Computer scienceGeneral Mathematicsinconsistent connectednessFOS: Physical sciencesGeneral Physics and AstronomyWorking hypothesisPublic opinion01 natural sciences050105 experimental psychology0103 physical sciencesFOS: Mathematicscontextuality0501 psychology and cognitive sciences010306 general physicsta515Quantum Physicsbusiness.industryOptical illusionProbability (math.PR)ta11105 social sciencescyclic systemsGeneral EngineeringKochen–Specker theorem81P13 81Q99 60A99 81P13 81Q99 60A99 81P13 81Q99 60A99Social systemFOS: Biological sciencesQuantitative Biology - Neurons and CognitionNeurons and Cognition (q-bio.NC)Quantum Physics (quant-ph)businessSocial experimentMathematics - ProbabilityCognitive psychologyPhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences
researchProduct

Probabilistic Contextuality in EPR/Bohm-type Systems with Signaling Allowed

2014

In this chapter, we review a principled way of defining and measuring contextuality in systems with deterministic inputs and random outputs, recently proposed and developed in \citep{KujalaDzhafarovLarsson2015,DKL2015FooP}.

Quantum PhysicsFOS: Biological sciencesQuantitative Biology - Neurons and CognitionProbability (math.PR)FOS: MathematicsFOS: Physical sciencesNeurons and Cognition (q-bio.NC)Quantum Physics (quant-ph)81P13 81Q99 60A99Mathematics - Probability
researchProduct

Contextuality in canonical systems of random variables

2017

Random variables representing measurements, broadly understood to include any responses to any inputs, form a system in which each of them is uniquely identified by its content (that which it measures) and its context (the conditions under which it is recorded). Two random variables are jointly distributed if and only if they share a context. In a canonical representation of a system, all random variables are binary, and every content-sharing pair of random variables has a unique maximal coupling (the joint distribution imposed on them so that they coincide with maximal possible probability). The system is contextual if these maximal couplings are incompatible with the joint distributions o…

Pure mathematicsGeneral MathematicsGeneral Physics and AstronomyBinary numberFOS: Physical sciencesContext (language use)01 natural sciences050105 experimental psychologydirect influencesJoint probability distribution0103 physical sciencesFOS: Mathematics0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesCanonical formcontextuality010306 general physicsCategorical variableta515MathematicsQuantum Physics05 social sciencesProbability (math.PR)ta111General EngineeringArticlesKochen–Specker theoremcanonical systemsIf and only ifdichotomizationmeasurementsQuantum Physics (quant-ph)81P13 81Q99 60A99Random variableMathematics - ProbabilityPhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A : Mathematical Physical and Engineering Sciences
researchProduct

Testing selective influence directly using trackball movement tasks

2019

Abstract Systems factorial technology (SFT; Townsend & Nozawa, 1995) is regarded as a useful tool to diagnose if features (or dimensions) of the investigated stimulus are processed in a parallel or serial fashion. In order to use SFT, one has to assume the speed to process each feature is influenced by that feature only, termed as selective influence (Sternberg, 1969). This assumption is usually untestable as the processing time for a stimulus feature is not observable. Stochastic dominance is traditionally used as an indirect evidence for selective influence (e.g., Townsend & Fific, 2004). However, one should keep in mind that selective influence may be violated even when stochastic domina…

FactorialComputer scienceApplied Mathematics05 social sciencesStochastic dominanceTest stimulusStimulus (physiology)050105 experimental psychologyIndirect evidence03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineDirect test0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesAlgorithm030217 neurology & neurosurgeryGeneral PsychologyJournal of Mathematical Psychology
researchProduct

Order-distance and other metric-like functions on jointly distributed random variables

2013

We construct a class of real-valued nonnegative binary functions on a set of jointly distributed random variables, which satisfy the triangle inequality and vanish at identical arguments (pseudo-quasi-metrics). These functions are useful in dealing with the problem of selective probabilistic causality encountered in behavioral sciences and in quantum physics. The problem reduces to that of ascertaining the existence of a joint distribution for a set of variables with known distributions of certain subsets of this set. Any violation of the triangle inequality or its consequences by one of our functions when applied to such a set rules out the existence of this joint distribution. We focus on…

FOS: Computer and information sciencesMeasurable functionComputer Science - Artificial IntelligenceGeneral MathematicsMathematics - Statistics TheoryStatistics Theory (math.ST)Quantitative Biology - Quantitative Methods01 natural sciences050105 experimental psychologyJoint probability distribution0103 physical sciencesFOS: Mathematics0501 psychology and cognitive sciences010306 general physicsQuantitative Methods (q-bio.QM)60B99 (Primary) 81Q99 91E45 (Secondary)Probability measureMathematicsDiscrete mathematicsTriangle inequalityApplied MathematicsProbability (math.PR)05 social sciencesFunction (mathematics)Artificial Intelligence (cs.AI)Distribution (mathematics)FOS: Biological sciencesSample spaceRandom variableMathematics - ProbabilityProceedings of the American Mathematical Society
researchProduct

Context–content systems of random variables : The Contextuality-by-Default theory

2016

Abstract This paper provides a systematic yet accessible presentation of the Contextuality-by-Default theory. The consideration is confined to finite systems of categorical random variables, which allows us to focus on the basics of the theory without using full-scale measure-theoretic language. Contextuality-by-Default is a theory of random variables identified by their contents and their contexts, so that two variables have a joint distribution if and only if they share a context. Intuitively, the content of a random variable is the entity the random variable measures or responds to, while the context is formed by the conditions under which these measurements or responses are obtained. A …

ta113Theoretical computer scienceComputer scienceApplied Mathematicscouplings05 social sciencesta111Probabilistic logicContext (language use)01 natural sciencesMeasure (mathematics)050105 experimental psychologyconnectednessKochen–Specker theoremrandom variablesJoint probability distribution0103 physical sciences0501 psychology and cognitive sciencescontextualityNegative number010306 general physicsCategorical variableRandom variableGeneral PsychologyJournal of Mathematical Psychology
researchProduct

Selectivity in Probabilistic Causality: Drawing Arrows from Inputs to Stochastic Outputs

2011

Given a set of several inputs into a system (e.g., independent variables characterizing stimuli) and a set of several stochastically non-independent outputs (e.g., random variables describing different aspects of responses), how can one determine, for each of the outputs, which of the inputs it is influenced by? The problem has applications ranging from modeling pairwise comparisons to reconstructing mental processing architectures to conjoint testing. A necessary and sufficient condition for a given pattern of selective influences is provided by the Joint Distribution Criterion, according to which the problem of "what influences what" is equivalent to that of the existence of a joint distr…

FOS: Computer and information sciencesArtificial Intelligence (cs.AI)91E45 (Primary) 60A05 (Secondary)Computer Science - Artificial IntelligencePhysics - Data Analysis Statistics and ProbabilityFOS: Biological sciencesProbability (math.PR)FOS: MathematicsFOS: Physical sciencesQuantitative Biology - Quantitative MethodsMathematics - ProbabilityData Analysis Statistics and Probability (physics.data-an)Quantitative Methods (q-bio.QM)
researchProduct

The Joint Distribution Criterion and the Distance Tests for Selective Probabilistic Causality

2010

A general definition and a criterion (a necessary and sufficient condition) are formulated for an arbitrary set of external factors to selectively influence a corresponding set of random entities (generalized random variables, with values in arbitrary observation spaces), jointly distributed at every treatment (a set of factor values containing precisely one value of each factor). The random entities are selectively influenced by the corresponding factors if and only if the following condition, called the joint distribution criterion, is satisfied : there is a jointly distributed set of random entities, one entity for every value of every factor, such that every subset of this set that corr…

selective influenceComputer scienceGeneralizationlcsh:BF1-990Value (computer science)systems of random variablescomputer.software_genre050105 experimental psychologyCausality (physics)Set (abstract data type)03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineJoint probability distributionHypothesis and TheoryPsychology0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesstochastically unrelatedGeneral PsychologyDiscrete mathematics05 social sciencesProbabilistic logicexternal factorsstochastic dependencejoint distributionlcsh:PsychologyProbabilistic causalitySum of normally distributed random variablesData miningcomputerRandom variable030217 neurology & neurosurgeryFrontiers in Psychology
researchProduct

A Bayesian-optimal principle for learner-friendly adaptation in learning games

2010

Abstract Adaptive learning games should provide opportunities for the student to learn as well as motivate playing until goals have been reached. In this paper, we give a mathematically rigorous treatment of the problem in the framework of Bayesian decision theory. To quantify the opportunities for learning, we assume that the learning tasks that yield the most information about the current skills of the student, while being desirable for measurement in their own right, would also be among those that are efficient for learning. Indeed, optimization of the expected information gain appears to naturally avoid tasks that are exceedingly demanding or exceedingly easy as their results are predic…

Computer sciencebusiness.industryApplied MathematicsE-learning (theory)05 social sciencesBayesian probability050301 educationMulti-task learningMachine learningcomputer.software_genre050105 experimental psychologyTask (project management)0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesAdaptive learningArtificial intelligenceHidden Markov modelAdaptation (computer science)business0503 educationcomputerGeneral PsychologyDynamic Bayesian networkJournal of Mathematical Psychology
researchProduct

A Qualified Kolmogorovian Account of Probabilistic Contextuality

2014

We describe a mathematical language for determining all possible patterns of contextuality in the dependence of stochastic outputs of a system on its deterministic inputs. The central principle contextuality-by-default is that the outputs indexed by mutually incompatible values of inputs are stochastically unrelated; but they can be coupled imposed a joint distribution on in a variety of ways. A system is characterized by a pattern of which outputs can be "directly influenced" by which inputs a primitive relation, hypothetical or normative, and by certain constraints imposed on the outputs such as Bell-type inequalities or their quantum analogues. The set of couplings compatible with these …

Relation (database)05 social sciencesProbabilistic logicLanguage of mathematicsContext (language use)16. Peace & justice01 natural sciences050105 experimental psychologyKochen–Specker theoremSet (abstract data type)Joint probability distribution0103 physical sciencesEconometrics0501 psychology and cognitive sciences010306 general physicsMathematical economicsQuantumMathematics
researchProduct

Measuring Observable Quantum Contextuality

2016

Contextuality is a central property in comparative analysis of classical, quantum, and supercorrelated systems. We examine and compare two well-motivated approaches to contextuality. One approach (“contextuality-by-default”) is based on the idea that one and the same physical property measured under different conditions (contexts) is represented by different random variables. The other approach is based on the idea that while a physical property is represented by a single random variable irrespective of its context, the joint distributions of the random variables describing the system can involve negative (quasi-)probabilities. We show that in the Leggett-Garg and EPR-Bell systems, the two …

CHSH inequalityObservableContext (language use)16. Peace & justice01 natural sciences010305 fluids & plasmasTheoretical physicsNegative probabilityJoint probability distribution0103 physical sciencesStatistical physics010306 general physicsQuantum contextualityRandom variableQuantumMathematics
researchProduct

Contextuality-by-Default: A Brief Overview of Ideas, Concepts, and Terminology

2016

This paper is a brief overview of the concepts involved in measuring the degree of contextuality and detecting contextuality in systems of binary measurements of a finite number of objects. We discuss and clarify the main concepts and terminology of the theory called “contextuality-by-default,” and then discuss generalizations of the theory to arbitrary systems of arbitrary random variables.

010308 nuclear & particles physics0103 physical sciencesCalculus010306 general physics01 natural sciencesAlgorithmFinite setKochen–Specker theoremMathematicsTerminology
researchProduct

Contextuality-by-Default 2.0: Systems with Binary Random Variables

2016

The paper outlines a new development in the Contextuality-by-Default theory as applied to finite systems of binary random variables. The logic and principles of the original theory remain unchanged, but the definition of contextuality of a system of random variables is now based on multimaximal rather than maximal couplings of the variables that measure the same property in different contexts: a system is considered noncontextual if these multimaximal couplings are compatible with the distributions of the random variables sharing contexts. A multimaximal coupling is one that is a maximal coupling of any subset (equivalently, of any pair) of the random variables being coupled. Arguments are …

Quantum PhysicsProbability (math.PR)FOS: MathematicsFOS: Physical sciencesQuantum Physics (quant-ph)81P13 81Q99 60A99Mathematics - Probability
researchProduct

All-Possible-Couplings Approach to Measuring Probabilistic Context.

2013

From behavioral sciences to biology to quantum mechanics, one encounters situations where (i) a system outputs several random variables in response to several inputs, (ii) for each of these responses only some of the inputs may "directly" influence them, but (iii) other inputs provide a "context" for this response by influencing its probabilistic relations to other responses. These contextual influences are very different, say, in classical kinetic theory and in the entanglement paradigm of quantum mechanics, which are traditionally interpreted as representing different forms of physical determinism. One can mathematically construct systems with other types of contextuality, whether or not …

lcsh:MedicineQuantum entanglementSocial and Behavioral Sciences01 natural sciencesQuantitative Biology - Quantitative MethodsJoint probability distributionPsychologyStatistical physicslcsh:ScienceQuantumQuantitative Methods (q-bio.QM)60B99 (Primary) 81Q99 91E45 (Secondary)PhysicsQuantum PhysicsMultidisciplinaryApplied MathematicsPhysics05 social sciencesComplex SystemsMental HealthMedicineMathematics - ProbabilityAlgorithmsResearch ArticleFOS: Physical sciencesContext (language use)Physical determinism050105 experimental psychologyProbability theory0103 physical sciencesFOS: Mathematics0501 psychology and cognitive sciences010306 general physicsQuantum MechanicsProbabilityta113BehaviorModels Statisticallcsh:RProbability (math.PR)Probabilistic logicRandom VariablesProbability TheoryKochen–Specker theoremFOS: Biological sciencesQuantum Theorylcsh:QQuantum EntanglementQuantum Physics (quant-ph)Mathematics
researchProduct

Quantum Entanglement and the Issue of Selective Influences in Psychology: An Overview

2012

Similar formalisms have been independently developed in psychology, to deal with the issue of selective influences (deciding which of several experimental manipulations selectively influences each of several, generally non-independent, response variables), and in quantum mechanics (QM), to deal with the EPR entanglement phenomena (deciding whether an EPR experiment allows for a "classical" account). The parallels between these problems are established by observing that any two noncommuting measurements in QM are mutually exclusive and can therefore be treated as analogs of different values of one and the same input. Both problems reduce to that of the existence of a jointly distributed syst…

Pure mathematics05 social sciencesQuantum entanglement01 natural sciencesRotation formalisms in three dimensions050105 experimental psychologysymbols.namesakeJoint probability distribution0103 physical sciencessymbols0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesStatistical physicsEPR paradox010306 general physicsParallelsRandom variableValue (mathematics)MathematicsVariable (mathematics)
researchProduct

A Supplementary Text to “Contextuality in Canonical Systems of Random Variables” by Ehtibar N. Dzhafarov, Víctor H. Cervantes, and Janne V. Kujala (P…

2017

Mathematical Proofs

TheoryofComputation_MATHEMATICALLOGICANDFORMALLANGUAGESTheoryofComputation_LOGICSANDMEANINGSOFPROGRAMSMathematicsofComputing_GENERAL
researchProduct

Selectivity in Probabilistic Causality: Where Psychology Runs Into Quantum Physics

2011

Given a set of several inputs into a system (e.g., independent variables characterizing stimuli) and a set of several stochastically non-independent outputs (e.g., random variables describing different aspects of responses), how can one determine, for each of the outputs, which of the inputs it is influenced by? The problem has applications ranging from modeling pairwise comparisons to reconstructing mental processing architectures to conjoint testing. A necessary and sufficient condition for a given pattern of selective influences is provided by the Joint Distribution Criterion, according to which the problem of "what influences what" is equivalent to that of the existence of a joint distr…

Linear programming81P05 (Primary) 91E99 (Secondary)media_common.quotation_subjectFOS: Physical sciencesMathematics - Statistics TheoryQuantum entanglementStatistics Theory (math.ST)System of linear equations01 natural sciencesQuantitative Biology - Quantitative Methods050105 experimental psychologyCausality (physics)Joint probability distributionQuantum mechanics0103 physical sciencesFOS: Mathematics0501 psychology and cognitive sciences010306 general physicsSet (psychology)ta515General PsychologyQuantitative Methods (q-bio.QM)media_commonta113ta112Quantum PhysicsVariablesta114Applied Mathematicsta11105 social sciencesFOS: Biological sciencesPhysics - Data Analysis Statistics and ProbabilityQuantum Physics (quant-ph)Random variableData Analysis Statistics and Probability (physics.data-an)
researchProduct

Contextuality is About Identity of Random Variables

2014

Contextual situations are those in which seemingly "the same" random variable changes its identity depending on the conditions under which it is recorded. Such a change of identity is observed whenever the assumption that the variable is one and the same under different conditions leads to contradictions when one considers its joint distribution with other random variables (this is the essence of all Bell-type theorems). In our Contextuality-by-Default approach, instead of asking why or how the conditions force "one and the same" random variable to change "its" identity, any two random variables recorded under different conditions are considered different "automatically". They are never the…

Quantum Physics05 social sciencesProbabilistic logicFOS: Physical sciencesCondensed Matter Physics01 natural sciences050105 experimental psychologyAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsKochen–Specker theoremIdentity (mathematics)Joint probability distribution0103 physical sciences81P13 81P05 60A990501 psychology and cognitive sciences010306 general physicsQuantum Physics (quant-ph)Mathematical economicsRandom variableMathematical PhysicsVariable (mathematics)Physical lawMathematics
researchProduct

Necessary and Sufficient Conditions for an Extended Noncontextuality in a Broad Class of Quantum Mechanical Systems

2015

The notion of (non)contextuality pertains to sets of properties measured one subset (context) at a time. We extend this notion to include so-called inconsistently connected systems, in which the measurements of a given property in different contexts may have different distributions, due to contextual biases in experimental design or physical interactions (signaling): a system of measurements has a maximally noncontextual description if they can be imposed a joint distribution on in which the measurements of any one property in different contexts are equal to each other with the maximal probability allowed by their different distributions. We derive necessary and sufficient conditions for th…

Quantum PhysicsClass (set theory)Property (philosophy)ta114Computer scienceSocial connectednessProbability (math.PR)ta111FOS: Physical sciencesGeneral Physics and AstronomyContext (language use)Electrical Engineering Electronic Engineering Information EngineeringKochen–Specker theoremkontekstuaalisuusMechanical systemJoint probability distributionFOS: MathematicscontextualityStatistical physicsElektroteknik och elektronikQuantum Physics (quant-ph)81P13 81Q99 60A99quantum mechanical systemsQuantumMathematics - ProbabilityPhysical Review Letters
researchProduct

A new definition of well-behaved discrimination functions

2009

Abstract A discrimination function shows the probability or degree with which stimuli are discriminated from each other when presented in pairs. In a previous publication [Kujala, J.V., & Dzhafarov, E.N. (2008). On minima of discrimination functions. Journal of Mathematical Psychology , 52 , 116–127] we introduced a condition under which the conformity of a discrimination function with the law of Regular Minimality (which says, essentially, that “being least discriminable from” is a symmetric relation) implies the constancy of the function’s minima (i.e., the same level of discriminability of every stimulus from the stimulus least discriminable from it). This condition, referred to as “well…

Mathematical psychologyApplied Mathematicsmedia_common.quotation_subjectHausdorff spaceTransitive closureStimulus (physiology)ConformityCombinatoricsMaxima and minimaSymmetric relationTransfinite inductionGeneral Psychologymedia_commonMathematicsJournal of Mathematical Psychology
researchProduct

Context-Content Systems of Random Variables: The Contextuality-by-Default Theory

2015

This paper provides a systematic yet accessible presentation of the Contextuality-by-Default theory. The consideration is confined to finite systems of categorical random variables, which allows us to focus on the basics of the theory without using full-scale measure-theoretic language. Contextuality-by-Default is a theory of random variables identified by their contents and their contexts, so that two variables have a joint distribution if and only if they share a context. Intuitively, the content of a random variable is the entity the random variable measures or responds to, while the context is formed by the conditions under which these measurements or responses are obtained. A system of…

Quantum PhysicsProbability (math.PR)FOS: MathematicsFOS: Physical sciencesQuantum Physics (quant-ph)Mathematics - Probability
researchProduct

Random Variables Recorded Under Mutually Exclusive Conditions: Contextuality-by-Default

2014

We present general principles underlying analysis of the dependence of random variables (outputs) on deterministic conditions (inputs). Random outputs recorded under mutually exclusive input values are labeled by these values and considered stochastically unrelated, possessing no joint distribution. An input that does not directly influence an output creates a context for the latter. Any constraint imposed on the dependence of random outputs on inputs can be characterized by considering all possible couplings (joint distributions) imposed on stochastically unrelated outputs. The target application of these principles is a quantum mechanical system of entangled particles, with directions of …

Constraint (information theory)SpinsJoint probability distributionControl theoryContext (language use)Statistical physicsMutually exclusive eventsRandom variableKochen–Specker theoremMathematicsSpin-½
researchProduct

Assessing the Effectiveness of Two Theoretically Motivated Computer-Assisted Reading Interventions in the United Kingdom: GG Rime and GG Phoneme

2013

We report an empirical comparison of the effectiveness of two theoretically motivated computer-assisted reading interventions (CARI) based on the Finnish GraphoGame CARI: English GraphoGame Rime (GG Rime) and English GraphoGame Phoneme (GG Phoneme). Participants were 6–7-year-old students who had been identified by their teachers as being relatively poor at reading. The students were divided into three groups. Two of the groups played one of the games as a supplement to normal classroom literacy instruction for five sessions per week for a period of 12 weeks. The third group formed an untreated control. Both games led to gains in reading, spelling, and phonological skills in comparison with…

ta113ta112Phonemic awarenessRhymemedia_common.quotation_subjectta111educationta6121PhonicsPhonogramLiteracySpellingP1EducationDevelopmental psychologyPhonological awarenessReading (process)PedagogyDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyPsychologyta515media_commonReading Research Quarterly
researchProduct

Asymptotic optimality of myopic information-based strategies for Bayesian adaptive estimation

2016

This paper presents a general asymptotic theory of sequential Bayesian estimation giving results for the strongest, almost sure convergence. We show that under certain smoothness conditions on the probability model, the greedy information gain maximization algorithm for adaptive Bayesian estimation is asymptotically optimal in the sense that the determinant of the posterior covariance in a certain neighborhood of the true parameter value is asymptotically minimal. Using this result, we also obtain an asymptotic expression for the posterior entropy based on a novel definition of almost sure convergence on "most trials" (meaning that the convergence holds on a fraction of trials that converge…

Statistics and ProbabilityAsymptotic analysisMathematical optimizationPosterior probabilityBayesian probabilityMathematics - Statistics TheoryStatistics Theory (math.ST)050105 experimental psychologydifferential entropyDifferential entropyactive data selection03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineactive learningFOS: Mathematics0501 psychology and cognitive sciencescost of observationdecision theoryMathematicsD-optimalityBayes estimatorSequential estimation05 social sciencesBayesian adaptive estimationAsymptotically optimal algorithmConvergence of random variablesasymptotic optimalitysequential estimation030217 neurology & neurosurgery
researchProduct

Embedding Quantum into Classical: Contextualization vs Conditionalization

2014

We compare two approaches to embedding joint distributions of random variables recorded under different conditions (such as spins of entangled particles for different settings) into the framework of classical, Kolmogorovian probability theory. In the contextualization approach each random variable is "automatically" labeled by all conditions under which it is recorded, and the random variables across a set of mutually exclusive conditions are probabilistically coupled (imposed a joint distribution upon). Analysis of all possible probabilistic couplings for a given set of random variables allows one to characterize various relations between their separate distributions (such as Bell-type ine…

Multivariate random variableFOS: Physical scienceslcsh:MedicineStability (probability)Joint probability distributionFOS: MathematicsMixture distributionStatistical physicslcsh:ScienceInverse distributionQuantum MechanicsProbabilityPhysicsta113Quantum PhysicsMultidisciplinaryModels StatisticalPhysicsProbability (math.PR)lcsh:RRandom Variables60A99 81P13Probability TheoryProbability DistributionAlgebra of random variablesEvents (Probability Theory)Sum of normally distributed random variablesPhysical SciencesQuantum Theorylcsh:QMarginal distributionQuantum EntanglementQuantum Physics (quant-ph)Mathematics - ProbabilityMathematicsResearch ArticlePlos One
researchProduct

Bayesian adaptive estimation: The next dimension

2006

Abstract We propose a new psychometric model for two-dimensional stimuli, such as color differences, based on parameterizing the threshold of a one-dimensional psychometric function as an ellipse. The Ψ Bayesian adaptive estimation method applied to this model yields trials that vary in multiple stimulus dimensions simultaneously. Simulations indicate that this new procedure can be much more efficient than the more conventional procedure of estimating the psychometric function on one-dimensional lines independently, requiring only one-fourth or less the number of trials for equivalent performance in typical situations. In a real psychophysical experiment with a yes–no task, as few as 22 tri…

Mathematical optimizationDiscretizationApplied MathematicsBayesian probabilityFast Fourier transformMonte Carlo methodMarkov chain Monte CarloEllipsesymbols.namesakePsychometric functionsymbolsAlgorithmScalingGeneral PsychologyMathematicsJournal of Mathematical Psychology
researchProduct