The previous research attempts to reduce the influence of the belief bias on deductive thinking have often been unsuccessful and, when they succeeded, they failed to replicate. In this paper, we propose a new way to see an old problem. Instead of considering the analytical abilities of the respondent, we focus on the communicative characteristics of the experimental task. By changing the pragmatics into play through a subtle manipulation of the instruction of the syllogism problem, we obtained a strong improvement in the accuracy of the performance in both untrained and trained in logic respondents. We suggest that current models of deductive thinking should be broadened to consider also communicative understanding as part of the processing...
Two views have dominated theories of deductive reasoning. One is the view that people reason using s...
An experiment utilizing response time measures was conducted to test dominant processing strategies ...
AbstractBelief bias is the tendency to be influenced by the believability of the conclusion when att...
Contains fulltext : 208870.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)The previous re...
This thesis focuses on deductive reasoning and how the belief bias effect can be reduced or ameliora...
In deductive reasoning, believable conclusions are more likely to be accepted regardless of their va...
In deductive reasoning, believable conclusions are more likely to be accepted regardless of their va...
Belief bias is the tendency for prior beliefs to influence people's deductive reasoning in two ways:...
When the validity of a deductive conclusion conflicts with its believability people often respond in...
The present study is a conceptual replication of De Neys & Franssen's (2009) study about the role of...
Models based on signal detection theory (SDT) have occupied a prominent role in domains such as perc...
Evans, Barston and Pollard, (1983) found that on the syllogistic evaluation task participants tended...
Belief bias is the tendency for prior beliefs to influence people's deductive reasoning in two ways:...
Judging if a conclusion follows logically from a given set of premises can depend much more on the b...
The belief-bias effect is one of the most-studied biases in reasoning. A recent study of the phenome...
Two views have dominated theories of deductive reasoning. One is the view that people reason using s...
An experiment utilizing response time measures was conducted to test dominant processing strategies ...
AbstractBelief bias is the tendency to be influenced by the believability of the conclusion when att...
Contains fulltext : 208870.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)The previous re...
This thesis focuses on deductive reasoning and how the belief bias effect can be reduced or ameliora...
In deductive reasoning, believable conclusions are more likely to be accepted regardless of their va...
In deductive reasoning, believable conclusions are more likely to be accepted regardless of their va...
Belief bias is the tendency for prior beliefs to influence people's deductive reasoning in two ways:...
When the validity of a deductive conclusion conflicts with its believability people often respond in...
The present study is a conceptual replication of De Neys & Franssen's (2009) study about the role of...
Models based on signal detection theory (SDT) have occupied a prominent role in domains such as perc...
Evans, Barston and Pollard, (1983) found that on the syllogistic evaluation task participants tended...
Belief bias is the tendency for prior beliefs to influence people's deductive reasoning in two ways:...
Judging if a conclusion follows logically from a given set of premises can depend much more on the b...
The belief-bias effect is one of the most-studied biases in reasoning. A recent study of the phenome...
Two views have dominated theories of deductive reasoning. One is the view that people reason using s...
An experiment utilizing response time measures was conducted to test dominant processing strategies ...
AbstractBelief bias is the tendency to be influenced by the believability of the conclusion when att...