International audienceLiterature on relational reasoning mainly focuses on the performance question. It is typically argued that problem difficulty relies on the number of "mental models" compatible with the problem. However, no study has ever investigated the wording of conclusions that participants formulate. In the present work, we analyze the relational terms that people use in drawing conclusions from spatial relation problems (A is to the left of B, B is to the left C, D is in front of A, E is in front C, What is the relation between D and E?). We observed a general preference for expressing conclusions with 'left' rather than conclusions with 'right'. We also found that three factors had an influence on the wording of the conclusions...
The assessment of whether a statement is consistent with what has gone before is ubiquitous in disco...
International audienceIn the present study, we explore how reading habits (e.g., reading from left t...
In a production experiment (Experiment 1) and an acceptability rating one (Experiment 2), we assesse...
International audienceThe effect of premise order on spatial reasoning was investigated using a para...
Two experiments investigated the mental representation of spatial and non-spatial two-dimensional pr...
International audienceRelational reasoning (A > B, B > C, therefore A > C) shares a number of simila...
Three experiments investigated whether the similarity of relational structures influences the interp...
Abstract Two experiments on spatial relational inference investigated effects known from relational ...
Three experiments investigated whether the similarity of relational structures influences the inter-...
In the last few decades, cognitive theories for explaining human spatial relational reasoning have i...
Searching for alternative solutions of an indeterminate reasoning task is an important and necessary...
Empirical findings indicate that humans draw infer- ences about spatial arrangements by constructing...
In two experiments we investigated three-term reasoning with spatial relational assertions using the...
Previous research (Oberauer & Wilhelm, 2000) has shown an inherent directionality between the two te...
The theory of mental models is the most prominent approach for explaining the underlying cognitive p...
The assessment of whether a statement is consistent with what has gone before is ubiquitous in disco...
International audienceIn the present study, we explore how reading habits (e.g., reading from left t...
In a production experiment (Experiment 1) and an acceptability rating one (Experiment 2), we assesse...
International audienceThe effect of premise order on spatial reasoning was investigated using a para...
Two experiments investigated the mental representation of spatial and non-spatial two-dimensional pr...
International audienceRelational reasoning (A > B, B > C, therefore A > C) shares a number of simila...
Three experiments investigated whether the similarity of relational structures influences the interp...
Abstract Two experiments on spatial relational inference investigated effects known from relational ...
Three experiments investigated whether the similarity of relational structures influences the inter-...
In the last few decades, cognitive theories for explaining human spatial relational reasoning have i...
Searching for alternative solutions of an indeterminate reasoning task is an important and necessary...
Empirical findings indicate that humans draw infer- ences about spatial arrangements by constructing...
In two experiments we investigated three-term reasoning with spatial relational assertions using the...
Previous research (Oberauer & Wilhelm, 2000) has shown an inherent directionality between the two te...
The theory of mental models is the most prominent approach for explaining the underlying cognitive p...
The assessment of whether a statement is consistent with what has gone before is ubiquitous in disco...
International audienceIn the present study, we explore how reading habits (e.g., reading from left t...
In a production experiment (Experiment 1) and an acceptability rating one (Experiment 2), we assesse...