2017
DOI: 10.3758/s13428-017-0874-x
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Finding the traces of behavioral and cognitive processes in big data and naturally occurring datasets

Abstract: Today, people generate and store more data than ever before as they interact with both real and virtual environments. These digital traces of behavior and cognition offer cognitive scientists and psychologists an unprecedented opportunity to test theories outside the laboratory. Despite general excitement about big data and naturally occurring datasets among researchers, three “gaps” stand in the way of their wider adoption in theory-driven research: the imagination gap, the skills gap, and the culture gap. We… Show more

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Cited by 54 publications
(45 citation statements)
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“…While it enables researchers to dissociate individual variables of interest, it can also lead to over-fixation on a specific paradigm and the small amount of variations it offers in contrast to more broadly sampling the space of experiments relevant to the behavior of interest. As a result, several researchers have started to call for a shift towards mining massive online datasets via crowdsourced experiments (Griffiths, 2015;Jones, 2016;Goldstone & Lupyan, 2016;McAbee, Landis, & Burke, 2017;Paxton & Griffiths, 2017;Schulz et al, 2019) because the scale offered by the internet enables scientists to quickly evaluate thousands of hypotheses on millions of participants.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While it enables researchers to dissociate individual variables of interest, it can also lead to over-fixation on a specific paradigm and the small amount of variations it offers in contrast to more broadly sampling the space of experiments relevant to the behavior of interest. As a result, several researchers have started to call for a shift towards mining massive online datasets via crowdsourced experiments (Griffiths, 2015;Jones, 2016;Goldstone & Lupyan, 2016;McAbee, Landis, & Burke, 2017;Paxton & Griffiths, 2017;Schulz et al, 2019) because the scale offered by the internet enables scientists to quickly evaluate thousands of hypotheses on millions of participants.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Second, research methods on uncertainty expressions are still primarily based on surveys or laboratory experiments. The development of databases used in accounting research, and particularly the increasing availability of 'big data', offer a promising research opportunity to use naturally occurring datasets (Paxton & Griffiths, 2017;Teoh, 2018), such as Google Trends, to trace people's perceptions of different uncertainty expressions over time. Also, ideally, this could offer a way to map uncertainty-expression scales across different culture and language contexts.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although other established datasets used in the recommender literature (e.g., MovieLens, LastFM, or Netflix) may contain millions of evaluations, to the best of our knowledge, even the most popular items in those datasets have been evaluated by only a small fraction of all users. Using the rich Jester dataset allowed us to study the principles underlying the success of different social learning strategies at a very large scale [46,75].…”
Section: Simulation Studymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Jester dataset allowed us to study the principles underlying the success of different social learning strategies at a very large scale [36,61].…”
Section: Simulation Studymentioning
confidence: 99%
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