Paper Detail

Human Adults and LLMs as Scientists: Who Benefits from Active Exploration?

Mandana Samiei, Eunice Yiu, Anthony GX-Chen, Dongyan Lin, Jocelyn Shen, Blake A. Richards, Alison Gopnik, Doina Precup

arxiv Score 9.3

Published 2026-06-04 · First seen 2026-06-05

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Abstract

A long-standing finding in the causal learning literature is that adults struggle to identify conjunctive causal rules, where an effect requires the simultaneous presence of multiple causes, while performing better in disjunctive settings. However, most demonstrations of this ``conjunctive handicap'' rely on passive observation paradigms with limited evidence, where learners have no control over evidence generation. This paper asks whether this bias persists when adults are granted agency through active exploration. Using a modified ``blicket detector'' task, adult participants freely intervened to identify causal objects under conjunctive or disjunctive rule structures. We show that active exploration substantially improves adults' conjunctive causal reasoning, although conjunctive rules still require more tests to infer than disjunctive rules. We further compare human performance to a range of large language models in the same setting. While some state-of-the-art models approach human-level performance on hypothesis inference accuracy, they often exhibit less efficient exploration strategies and similar conjunctive-disjunctive performance gaps.

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@article{samiei2026human,
  title = {Human Adults and LLMs as Scientists: Who Benefits from Active Exploration?},
  author = {Mandana Samiei and Eunice Yiu and Anthony GX-Chen and Dongyan Lin and Jocelyn Shen and Blake A. Richards and Alison Gopnik and Doina Precup},
  year = {2026},
  abstract = {A long-standing finding in the causal learning literature is that adults struggle to identify conjunctive causal rules, where an effect requires the simultaneous presence of multiple causes, while performing better in disjunctive settings. However, most demonstrations of this ``conjunctive handicap'' rely on passive observation paradigms with limited evidence, where learners have no control over evidence generation. This paper asks whether this bias persists when adults are granted agency throug},
  url = {https://arxiv.org/abs/2606.06464},
  keywords = {cs.CL},
  eprint = {2606.06464},
  archiveprefix = {arXiv},
}

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