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Dive into the research topics where Erik W. Cheries is active.

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Featured researches published by Erik W. Cheries.


Perception | 2006

Units of Visual Individuation in Rhesus Macaques: Objects or Unbound Features?:

Erik W. Cheries; George E. Newman; Laurie R. Santos; Brian J. Scholl

Vision begins with the processing of unbound visual features, which must eventually be bound together into object representations. Such feature binding is required for coherent visual perception, and accordingly has received a considerable amount of study in several domains. Neurophysiological work, often in monkeys, has revealed the details of how and where feature binding occurs in the brain, but methodological limitations have not allowed this research to elucidate just how feature binding operates spontaneously in real-world situations. In contrast, behavioral work with human infants has demonstrated how we use simpler unbound features to individuate and identify objects over time and occlusion in many types of events, but this work has not typically been able to isolate the role of feature binding in such processing. Here we provide a method for assessing the spontaneity and fidelity of feature binding in non-human primates, as this process is utilized in real-world situations, including simple foraging behaviors. Using both looking-time and manual-search measures in a natural environment, we show that free-ranging rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) spontaneously bind features in order to individuate objects across time and occlusion in dynamic events. This pattern of results demonstrates that feature binding is used in subtle ways to guide ecologically relevant behavior in a non-human animal, spontaneously and reliably, in its natural environment.


Scientific Data | 2016

Data from a pre-publication independent replication initiative examining ten moral judgement effects

Warren Tierney; Martin Schweinsberg; Jennifer Jordan; Deanna M. Kennedy; Israr Qureshi; S. Amy Sommer; Nico Thornley; Nikhil Madan; Michelangelo Vianello; Eli Awtrey; Luke Lei Zhu; Daniel Diermeier; Justin E. Heinze; Malavika Srinivasan; David Tannenbaum; Eliza Bivolaru; Jason Dana; Christilene du Plessis; Quentin Frederik Gronau; Andrew C. Hafenbrack; Eko Yi Liao; Alexander Ly; Maarten Marsman; Toshio Murase; Michael Schaerer; Christina M. Tworek; Eric-Jan Wagenmakers; Lynn Wong; Tabitha Anderson; Christopher W. Bauman

We present the data from a crowdsourced project seeking to replicate findings in independent laboratories before (rather than after) they are published. In this Pre-Publication Independent Replication (PPIR) initiative, 25 research groups attempted to replicate 10 moral judgment effects from a single laboratory’s research pipeline of unpublished findings. The 10 effects were investigated using online/lab surveys containing psychological manipulations (vignettes) followed by questionnaires. Results revealed a mix of reliable, unreliable, and culturally moderated findings. Unlike any previous replication project, this dataset includes the data from not only the replications but also from the original studies, creating a unique corpus that researchers can use to better understand reproducibility and irreproducibility in science.


Journal of Cognition and Development | 2017

Inferring Social Disposition by Sound and Surface Appearance in Infancy

Ashley Lyons; Erik W. Cheries

ABSTRACT Adults automatically infer a person’s social disposition and future behavior based on the many properties they observe about how they look and sound. The goal of the current study is to explore the developmental origins of this bias. We tested whether 12-month-old infants automatically infer a character’s social disposition (e.g., whether they are likely to “help” or “hinder” another character’s goal) based on the sounds and visual features those characters display. Infants were habituated to 2 characters, 1 that possessed more positive properties (e.g., a soft, fluffy appearance and a happy-sounding laugh) or more negative properties (e.g., a sharp, pointy appearance and a deep, ominous laugh). During test trials, we observed that infants looked longer at events that involved characters engaging in social actions toward another that were inconsistent rather than consistent with the valence of how they looked and sounded during habituation. Two control conditions support the interpretation that infants’ responses were based on an inferred causal relationship between a character’s features and its disposition rather than on some noncausal associations between the positive and negative valences of the characteristics and actions. Together, these studies suggest that infants are biased to connect an agent’s audiovisual features to their social behavior.


Journal of Vision | 2010

Interrupting infants' persisting object representations: An object-based limit?

Erik W. Cheries; Karen Wynn; Brian J. Scholl

Making sense of the visual world requires keeping track of objects as the same persisting individuals over time and occlusion. Here we implement a new paradigm using 10-month-old infants to explore the processes and representations that support this ability in two ways. First, we demonstrate that persisting object representations can be maintained over brief interruptions from additional independent events ‐ just as a memory of a traffic scene may be maintained through a brief glance in the rearview mirror. Second, we demonstrate that this ability is nevertheless subject to an object-based limit: if an interrupting event involves enough objects (carefully controlling for overall salience), then it will impair the maintenance of other persisting object representations even though it is an independent event. These experiments demonstrate how object representations can be studied via their ‘interruptibility’, and the results are consistent with the idea that infants’ persisting object representations are constructed and maintained by capacity-limited mid-level ‘object-files’.


Developmental Science | 2008

Cohesion as a constraint on object persistence in infancy

Erik W. Cheries; Stephen R. Mitroff; Karen Wynn; Brian J. Scholl


Journal of Experimental Social Psychology | 2016

The pipeline project: Pre-publication independent replications of a single laboratory's research pipeline

Martin Schweinsberg; Nikhil Madan; Michelangelo Vianello; S. Amy Sommer; Jennifer Jordan; Warren Tierney; Eli Awtrey; Luke Lei Zhu; Daniel Diermeier; Justin E. Heinze; Malavika Srinivasan; David Tannenbaum; Eliza Bivolaru; Jason Dana; Christilene du Plessis; Quentin Frederik Gronau; Andrew C. Hafenbrack; Eko Yi Liao; Alexander Ly; Maarten Marsman; Toshio Murase; Israr Qureshi; Michael Schaerer; Nico Thornley; Christina M. Tworek; Eric-Jan Wagenmakers; Lynn Wong; Tabitha Anderson; Christopher W. Bauman; Wendy L. Bedwell


Developmental Science | 2006

Interrupting infants’ persisting object representations: an object-based limit?

Erik W. Cheries; Karen Wynn; Brian J. Scholl


Archive | 2009

Do the same principles constrain persisting object representations in infant cognition and adult perception?: The cases of continuity and cohesion

Erik W. Cheries; Stephen R. Mitroff; Karen Wynn amp Scholl; J Brian


Journal of Vision | 2010

Cues to object persistence in infancy: Tracking objects through occlusion vs. implosion

Erik W. Cheries; Lisa Feigenson; Brian J. Scholl; Susan Carey


Archive | 2009

Do the same principles constrain persisting object representations in infant cognition and adult perception

Erik W. Cheries; Stephen R. Mitroff; Karen Wynn; Brian J. Scholl

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Ashley Lyons

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Eli Awtrey

University of Washington

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Hernando Taborda-Osorio

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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