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Dive into the research topics where Jonathan F. Kominsky is active.

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Featured researches published by Jonathan F. Kominsky.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Missing Links in Middle School: Developing Use of Disciplinary Relatedness in Evaluating Internet Search Results

Frank C. Keil; Jonathan F. Kominsky

In the “digital native” generation, internet search engines are a commonly used source of information. However, adolescents may fail to recognize relevant search results when they are related in discipline to the search topic but lack other cues. Middle school students, high school students, and adults rated simulated search results for relevance to the search topic. The search results were designed to contrast deep discipline-based relationships with lexical similarity to the search topic. Results suggest that the ability to recognize disciplinary relatedness without supporting cues may continue to develop into high school. Despite frequent search engine usage, younger adolescents may require additional support to make the most of the information available to them.


Cognitive Science | 2014

Children Use Temporal Cues to Learn Causal Directionality

Benjamin M. Rottman; Jonathan F. Kominsky; Frank C. Keil

The ability to learn the direction of causal relations is critical for understanding and acting in the world. We investigated how children learn causal directionality in situations in which the states of variables are temporally dependent (i.e., autocorrelated). In Experiment 1, children learned about causal direction by comparing the states of one variable before versus after an intervention on another variable. In Experiment 2, children reliably inferred causal directionality merely from observing how two variables change over time; they interpreted Y changing without a change in X as evidence that Y does not influence X. Both of these strategies make sense if one believes the variables to be temporally dependent. We discuss the implications of these results for interpreting previous findings. More broadly, given that many real-world environments are characterized by temporal dependency, these results suggest strategies that children may use to learn the causal structure of their environments.


Psychological Science | 2017

Categories and Constraints in Causal Perception

Jonathan F. Kominsky; Brent Strickland; Annie E. Wertz; Claudia Elsner; Karen Wynn; Frank C. Keil

When object A moves adjacent to a stationary object, B, and in that instant A stops moving and B starts moving, people irresistibly see this as an event in which A causes B to move. Real-world causal collisions are subject to Newtonian constraints on the relative speed of B following the collision, but here we show that perceptual constraints on the relative speed of B (which align imprecisely with Newtonian principles) define two categories of causal events in perception. Using performance-based tasks, we show that triggering events, in which B moves noticeably faster than A, are treated as being categorically different from launching events, in which B does not move noticeably faster than A, and that these categories are unique to causal events (Experiments 1 and 2). Furthermore, we show that 7- to 9-month-old infants are sensitive to this distinction, which suggests that this boundary may be an early-developing component of causal perception (Experiment 3).


Cognitive Science | 2014

Overestimation of Knowledge About Word Meanings: The “Misplaced Meaning” Effect

Jonathan F. Kominsky; Frank C. Keil


Cognition | 2017

Normality and actual causal strength

Thomas F. Icard; Jonathan F. Kominsky; Joshua Knobe


Journal of Vision | 2016

Retinotopic adaptation reveals multiple distinct categories of causal perception

Jonathan F. Kominsky; Brian J. Scholl


Developmental Psychology | 2016

The Better Part of Not Knowing: Virtuous Ignorance.

Jonathan F. Kominsky; Philip Langthorne; Frank C. Keil


Gesture | 2009

Repetition in infant-directed action depends on the goal structure of the object: Evidence for statistical regularities

Rebecca J. Brand; Anna McGee; Jonathan F. Kominsky; Kristen Briggs; Aline Gruneisen; Tessa Orbach


Developmental Psychology | 2015

Figuring out function: Children’s and adults’ use of ownership information in judgments of artifact function.

Konika Banerjee; Jonathan F. Kominsky; Madhawee Fernando; Frank C. Keil


IEEE Transactions on Autonomous Mental Development | 2013

Mothers’ Infant-Directed Gaze During Object Demonstration Highlights Action Boundaries and Goals

Rebecca J. Brand; Emily Hollenbeck; Jonathan F. Kominsky

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