TASK 4 - REASONING Flashcards

1
Q

reasoning

A

= cognitive processes that transform given information (a set of premises) in order to reach conclusions

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2
Q

deductive reasoning

A

= general –> specific
- deductive validity = when premises are true, you reason according to logical principles, then your conclusion cannot be wrong

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3
Q

inductive reasoning

A

= specific –> general

  • conclusion can contain new information
  • inductive strength = argument has inductive strength if it is impossible for premises to be true and conclusion to be false
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4
Q

inductive

- analogical reasoning

A
  • apply found relationship/analogy to determine a solution
  • verbal (“A is to B what C is to ___) + pictorial analogies
  • series & matrix completion
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5
Q

inductive

- hypothesis testing

A
  • people tend to first develop a general idea of the rule, then construct examples
  • 2-4-6 task (Wason): given a bunch of numbers; have to determine the rule only by offering examples, not by asking direct questions about the rule
  • confirmation bias: people try to confirm their rule is true rather than trying to test/ falsify it
  • positive testing: generating numbers that are instance for hypothesis
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6
Q

deductive

- conditional/propositional reasoning

A

= if-then relations (A: antecedent, B: conclusion)

  • proposition = claim that can be either true or false
  • compound propositions: propositions formed by using logical connectives
    a) affirming antecedent = modus ponen: A √, B √
    b) denying antecedent: A x, B x
    c) affirming consequence: B √, A √
    d) denying consequence = modus tollens: B x, A x
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7
Q

deductive

- syllogistic reasoning

A

= categorical syllogism: 3 premises that deal with classes of entities (include quantifiers)
1&2: state premises
- premises = propositions about which arguments are made
3: conclusion based on premises
- belief bias: tendency to accept invalid conclusions that are believable rather than believe valid conclusions that are unbelievable

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8
Q

deductive/conditional reasoning

- Wason selection task

A
  • must affirm modus ponens + tollens
  • matching bias: tendency to select those cards explicitly mentioned in the rule
  • confirmation bias: tendency to confirm own hypothesis rather than looking for other options
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9
Q

conditional reasoning

- 2 systems, 4 processing strategies

A

system 1:
- pragmatic strategy: causal processing during conversation
- semantic strategy: use background knowledge
system 2:
- inhibitory strategy: inhibit pragmatic strategy and background knowledge
- generative strategy: combine inhibitory with abstract analytic processing; BEST ONE

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10
Q

everyday reasoning

A
  • implicit premises
  • problems are not self-contained
  • several possible answers which vary in quality
  • rarely established procedures
  • personal relevance
  • goal-directed
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11
Q

deductive

- mental model theory

A

mental model = representation of a possible state of affairs in the world

  • principle of truth: construct mental models that represent explicitly only what is true + not what is false; minimise WM load
  • -> confirmation bias
  • people should use falsification
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12
Q

limitations of mental model theory

A

x overestimate deductive reasoning + falsification
x processes are under-specified
x ignores individual differences
x doesn’t explain which pieces of background knowledge are used

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13
Q

deductive

  • dual-systems theory
  • Kahneman
A
associative system 1:
- unconscious, fast
- heuristic-based
- parallel processing
- unlimited capacity
- independent of general intelligence
analytical system 2:
- deliberate, active, analytic
- rule-based
- serial processing (one problem at a time)
- limited by WM
- dependent on general intelligence
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14
Q

heuristic-analytic theory

- Evans

A
heuristic processes (I): task features, current goal and background knowledge to construct single hypothetical possibility
analytic process (II): may or may not intervene to revise or replace mental model
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15
Q

principles of heuristic-analytic theory

A
  1. singularity principle: one model at a time
  2. relevance principle: only consider what is relevant for mental model
  3. satisfying principle: decide if mental model satisfies needs (analytic thinking)
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16
Q

approaches to study reasoning

- componential approach

A

= analysing a task into its component cognitive processes (mental subroutines)
- performance components = individual cognitive processes (encode –> recognise + retrieve from memory –> infer relationship –> apply relationship)
- meta-components = executive processes used in planning, monitoring
- knowledge acquisition components = used whenever we acquire new information
x common source of error: inability to use certain performance or meta-components effectively

17
Q

approaches to study reasoning

- rules/heuristics approach

A
  • reasoning = relies on special-purpose mental rules (like grammar) for inferences
    hypotheses:
  • Cheng: people interpret problems in terms of what they are about, based on that use different schemata
  • Braine: people can + do use same set of abstract rules in all situations
  • Cosmides: social contract theory = especially good at tasks when content is construed in terms of social costs/benefits –> evolutionary adaptive mechanism
    x common source of error: failure to interpret a problem in terms of the appropriate rules
18
Q

approaches to study reasoning

- mental models approach

A
  • reasoning = constructing models to depict premises (like mental images when you read)
  • effective reasoning = assess first conclusion by attempting to construct an alternative model consistent with premises, not with the hypothesised conclusion
    x common source of error: failure to construct relevant models, failure to assess the implications of all the models found, failure to construct enough models
19
Q

brain parts

A
  • broca’s area: deductive reasoning –> greater involvement of syntactical processing & working memory on deductive reasoning tasks
  • left DLPFC: inductive reasoning; plan execution
  • right DLPFC: plan generation
  • left PFC: integrating relations (= to build mental representations that incorporate multiple propositions/ relationships)
20
Q

secularisation hypothesis (PRESENTATION)

A

= with more widespread access to formal education & technology a focus on natural explanations will increasingly compete with & displace supernatural explanations

  • natural explanation: appeal to “observable + empirically verifiable phenomena of the physical/ material world”
  • supernatural explanation: appeal to phenomena that “operate outside of/ are distinct from the natural world”
21
Q

explanatory co-existence

A

= when (1) natural + (2) supernatural explanations are generated to interpret the same events

1) natural explanation: appeal to “observable phenomena of the physical/ material world”
2) supernatural explanation: appeal to phenomena that “are distinct from the natural world”
- synthetic thinking: loose integration of natural + supernatural frameworks without in-depth consideration of how they might interact
- target-depending thinking: 2 explanations are used to account for distinct aspects of a given phenomenon; involves different kinds of causality
- integrated thinking: explanations become well-coordinated, use both explanations

22
Q

results of cross-cultural perspectives on explanatory co-existence

A
  • human origins: no explanatory co-existence
  • death: target-dependent thinking (mostly natural explanations)
  • illness: synthetic thinking; explanatory co-existence 77%
  • -> death + illness: people often unsatisfied with only natural explanations; seek to understand why these things happen to them/their loved ones –> death + illness show more explanatory coexistence