The easy solution of the selection tasks with social contract rules, compared to the poor results of the original formulation of the tasks with descriptive rules, has been interpreted, in the framework of massive modularity hypothesis, as the evidence that humans are adaptively skilled to reason about particular deontic domains. Nevertheless, the two versions of the tasks are incomparable because they differ not only for the content of the rule, but also in terms of structural features that make their solution based on different types of reasoning– about and from a rule. In this study we disentangled these two aspects by testing type of reasoning (about vs. from) and content of the rule (descriptive vs. social contract) separately in ...
Difference in performance in Wason selection tasks between descriptive and deontic sentences - or sp...
The research described investigates why subjects frequently give logically wrong answers to problems...
This paper was presented at the THIRD INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON THINKING. British Psychological ...
The easy solution of the selection tasks with social contract rules, compared to the poor results o...
The better performance in the selection task with deontic rules, compared to the descriptive version...
In two studies we tested the hypothesis that the appropriate linguistic formulation of a deontic rul...
This paper presents a discussion of recent research on how pragmatic knowledge (i.e. knowledge of th...
This paper was presented at 20th Conference of the EUROPEAN SOCIETY FOR COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY-ESCOP, ...
Influent theories on human reasoning have suggested that Wason's selection task is so difficult beca...
Undoubtedly one of the most important studies in evolutionary cognitive psychology is Cosmides' (198...
We propose that people typically reason about realistic situations using neither content-free syntac...
One of the cognitive processes, which has generated more research within the framework of the Psycho...
grantor: University of TorontoThe Wason selection task (Wason, 1966) is a reasoning task w...
A number of theoretical positions in psychology--including variants of case-based reasoning, instanc...
This paper was presented at "The European Conference on Cognitive Science. Siena, Italy, October 199...
Difference in performance in Wason selection tasks between descriptive and deontic sentences - or sp...
The research described investigates why subjects frequently give logically wrong answers to problems...
This paper was presented at the THIRD INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON THINKING. British Psychological ...
The easy solution of the selection tasks with social contract rules, compared to the poor results o...
The better performance in the selection task with deontic rules, compared to the descriptive version...
In two studies we tested the hypothesis that the appropriate linguistic formulation of a deontic rul...
This paper presents a discussion of recent research on how pragmatic knowledge (i.e. knowledge of th...
This paper was presented at 20th Conference of the EUROPEAN SOCIETY FOR COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY-ESCOP, ...
Influent theories on human reasoning have suggested that Wason's selection task is so difficult beca...
Undoubtedly one of the most important studies in evolutionary cognitive psychology is Cosmides' (198...
We propose that people typically reason about realistic situations using neither content-free syntac...
One of the cognitive processes, which has generated more research within the framework of the Psycho...
grantor: University of TorontoThe Wason selection task (Wason, 1966) is a reasoning task w...
A number of theoretical positions in psychology--including variants of case-based reasoning, instanc...
This paper was presented at "The European Conference on Cognitive Science. Siena, Italy, October 199...
Difference in performance in Wason selection tasks between descriptive and deontic sentences - or sp...
The research described investigates why subjects frequently give logically wrong answers to problems...
This paper was presented at the THIRD INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON THINKING. British Psychological ...