Apply the League of Legends (LoL) experiment, comparing novice and expert interpretations of generalizations, to a novel setting. In the LoL experiment, participants were shown a team, told that a knowledgeable speaker had decided to make a generalization about the team based on having seen the team's performance in 100 games, and then asked to interpret that generalization in terms of what they thought the knowledgeable speaker had seen. While the LoL setting allows for authentic expertise, the knowledge underlying that expertise has to be assumed, since any learning has occurred prior to the experiment. This modified experiment will adopt the same basic structure, but statements will be made about a novel sport (referred to as borfball here, but actually a random nonce word). This will allow us to in effect create our own expert and novice participants by directly providing them with background information. As such, this experiment will consist of a between-subject condition of expertise (the quantity of background information given to a participant) and a within subject condition of expertise (the content of that background information). This will allow is to test whether the effects observed in the LoL setting replicate and learn more about what aspects of expertise are most responsible for the effect.