Recording

https://www.bilibili.com/video/BV1P94y1a7Kf/?spm_id_from=333.999.0.0&vd_source=e9626f9767e6e22ece9d765f34ba01c5

Speaker

Mark Ho

Bio

Mark Ho is an Assistant Professor in the Computer Science Department at Stevens Institute of Technology. Previously, he was a faculty fellow at NYU and a postdoc at Princeton and UC Berkeley. He received his Ph.D in Cognitive Science and M.S. in Computer Science from Brown University. His research combines approaches from cognitive science, social psychology, and computer science to study the computational principles underlying human problem solving and social cognition.

Abstract

One of the most striking features of human intelligence is our capacity to rapidly and flexibly plan. Planning enables us to solve myriad everyday problems—e.g., planning how to complete a list of errands on a busy day—but planning is also very computationally demanding. How do we effectively plan despite fundamental constraints on our time, memory, and attention? My talk will cover recent work investigating how the flexible construction of task representations facilitates efficient planning in humans. I will discuss value-guided construal, a general formal theory of how people form simplified, ad hoc representations in order to plan and act. By investigating the computational principles that underlie how people construe problems, this approach provides a new perspective on the dynamic interplay of attention, causal reasoning, and goal-directed behavior.