{"creation_time": 1690567478, "last_updated": 1690567478, "name": "violation-of-expectation task", "definition_text": "The violation of expectation (VOE) task can be used to query adults' and young children's knowledge and learning about many topics. A minimum, participants are shown a pair of events - one that is more expected, and one that is more unexpected. Participants can be asked to make all sorts of judgments - adults can rate how surprising the outcomes are, and infants can be given the opportunity to look at the events for as long as they choose. The logic behind this task is that if participants have the hypothesized expectation entailed in the contrast between these stimuli, then they should rate one events as more surprising than the other. \r\n\r\nIn studies of infants, especially those that measure looking behavior, there is usually a sequence of familiarization trials first, to give participants enough opportunity to encode the events, and (sometimes) to teach them a particular expectation. After this phase, infants are then shown the expected and unexpected outcomes.\r\n\r\nThe validity of this task hinges on how well-controlled the stimuli are. Oftentimes researchers run many conditions in order to narrow in on exactly what aspects of the stimuli participants are responding to.", "id": "tsk_2lU25qYLrwkfj", "type": "task", "conditions": [], "concepts": [], "indicators": [], "external_datasets": [], "implementations": [], "citation": [], "contrasts": [], "batteries": [], "disorders": []}