We don’t think that real humans are likely to be using Bayes nets to model the world. We make this assumption for much the same reasons that we assume models use Bayes nets, namely that it’s a test case where we have a good sense of what we want a solution to ELK to look like. We think the arguments given in the report will basically extend to more realistic models of how humans reason (or rather, we aren’t aware of a concrete model of how humans reason for which the arguments don’t apply).
If you think there’s a specific part of the report where the human Bayes net assumption seems crucial, I’d be happy to try to give a more general form of the argument in question.
We don’t think that real humans are likely to be using Bayes nets to model the world. We make this assumption for much the same reasons that we assume models use Bayes nets, namely that it’s a test case where we have a good sense of what we want a solution to ELK to look like. We think the arguments given in the report will basically extend to more realistic models of how humans reason (or rather, we aren’t aware of a concrete model of how humans reason for which the arguments don’t apply).
If you think there’s a specific part of the report where the human Bayes net assumption seems crucial, I’d be happy to try to give a more general form of the argument in question.