How people differ in syllogistic reasoning
نویسندگان
چکیده
Psychologists have studied syllogistic inferences for more than a century, but no extant theory gives an adequate account of them. Reasoners appear to reason using different strategies. A complete account of syllogisms must therefore explain these strategies and the resulting differences from one individual to another in the patterns of conclusions that they draw. We propose a dual-process theory that solves these two problems. It is based on the manipulation of mental models, i.e., iconic simulations of possibilities. We also propose a new way in which to analyze individual differences, which depends on implementing a stochastic computer program. The program, mReasoner, generates an initial conclusion by building and scanning a mental model. It can vary four separate factors in the process: the size of a model, its contents, the propensity to consider alternative models, and the propensity to revise its heuristic conclusions. The former two parameters control intuitive processes and the latter two control deliberative processes. The theory accounts for individual differences in an early study on syllogisms (Johnson-Laird & Steedman, 1978). The computational model provides an algorithmic account of the different processes on which three subsets of participants relied (Simulation 1). It also simulates the performance of each individual participant in the study (Simulation 2). The theory and its implementation constitute the first robust account of individual differences in syllogistic reasoning.
منابع مشابه
Reasoning in people with obsessive-compulsive disorder.
OBJECTIVES The aim of this study was to investigate the inductive and deductive reasoning abilities of people with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). Following previous research, it was predicted that people with OCD would show different abilities on inductive reasoning tasks but similar abilities to controls on deductive reasoning tasks. DESIGN A two-group comparison was used with both gro...
متن کاملCan natural language semantics explain syllogistic reasoning?
It has long been known that conversion of the quantifiers can explain syllogistic reasoning errors (Newstead, 1989; Revlis, 1975; Wilkins, 1928). Geurts is more concerned with explaining how people solve valid syllogisms, and an integral part of his model is the (entirely legal) conversion of ‘no’ and ‘some’. This part of Geurts’ theory seems unexceptionable, but more problematic is his assumpt...
متن کاملSyllogistic Reasoning with Generic Premises: The Generic Overgeneralization Effect
Generics are statements that are not explicitly quantified and that express generalizations, such as ‘ducks lay eggs’. Intuitively, the generic (non-quantified) form of such statements seems to be true. Furthermore, people seem to be prone to an interesting error: treating the universal form of characteristic generic assertions (e.g., ‘all ducks lay eggs’) as true, even though they are, upon a ...
متن کاملThe propositional and relational syllogistic∗
In this paper it is shown how syllogistic reasoning can be extended to account for propositional logic and relations.
متن کاملWhere Syllogistic Reasoning Happens An Argument for the Extended Mind Hypothesis
Does cognition sometimes literally extend into the extraorganismic environment (Clark, 2003), or is it always “merely” environmentally embedded (Rupert, 2004)? Underlying this current border dispute is the question about how to individuate cognitive processes on principled grounds. Based on recent evidence about the active role of representation selection and construction in learning how to rea...
متن کامل