Does informational independence always matter? Children believe small group discussion is more accurate than ten times as many independent informants

Emory Richardson, Frank Keil. Does informational independence always matter? Children believe small group discussion is more accurate than ten times as many independent informants. In Stephanie Denison, Michael Mack, Yang Xu 0023, Blair C. Armstrong, editors, Proceedings of the 42th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society - Developing a Mind: Learning in Humans, Animals, and Machines, CogSci 2020, virtual, July 29 - August 1, 2020. cognitivesciencesociety.org, 2020. [doi]

@inproceedings{RichardsonK20-1,
  title = {Does informational independence always matter? Children believe small group discussion is more accurate than ten times as many independent informants},
  author = {Emory Richardson and Frank Keil},
  year = {2020},
  url = {https://cogsci.mindmodeling.org/2020/papers/0052/index.html},
  researchr = {https://researchr.org/publication/RichardsonK20-1},
  cites = {0},
  citedby = {0},
  booktitle = {Proceedings of the 42th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society - Developing a Mind: Learning in Humans, Animals, and Machines, CogSci 2020, virtual, July 29 - August 1, 2020},
  editor = {Stephanie Denison and Michael Mack and Yang Xu 0023 and Blair C. Armstrong},
  publisher = {cognitivesciencesociety.org},
}