The conjunction fallacy has been cited as a classic example of the automatic contextualisation of problems. In two experiments we compared the performance of autistic and typically developing adolescents on a set of conjunction fallacy tasks. Participants with autism were less susceptible to the conjunction fallacy. Experiment 2 also demonstrated that the difference between the groups did not result from increased sensitivity to the conjunction rule, or from impaired processing of social materials amongst the autistic participants. Although adolescents with autism showed less bias in their reasoning they were not more logical than the control group in a normative sense. The findings are discussed in the light of accounts which emphasise dif...
Background: The sociocommunicative problems in autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are traditionally link...
Conté: Appendix A. Supplementary dataFalse belief (FB) reasoning emerges around 4− 5 years of age in...
Background:This study presents two experiments that investigated whether children with autism were s...
In this study we compared the performance of autistic and typically developing adolescents on three ...
In this study both adolescents with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and typically developing controls...
From a logical viewpoint, people must reason to as well as from interpretations in deductive reasoni...
C. Jarrold, W. Butler, E. M. Cottington, and F. Jiminez (2000) proposed that weak central coherence ...
The literature suggests that individuals with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) are deficient in their...
Reasoning from all knowledge and belief is an adaptive approach to thinking about the world. It has ...
Following the work of Frith (1970a 1970b, 1989) and Hermelin and O’Connor (1971), it was suggested t...
The literature suggests that individuals with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) are deficient in their...
Reasoning about problems with empirically false content can be hard, as the inferences that people d...
Background: The sociocommunicative problems in autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are traditionally link...
Contains fulltext : 76862.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)While autism i...
Contains fulltext : 80036.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)While autism i...
Background: The sociocommunicative problems in autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are traditionally link...
Conté: Appendix A. Supplementary dataFalse belief (FB) reasoning emerges around 4− 5 years of age in...
Background:This study presents two experiments that investigated whether children with autism were s...
In this study we compared the performance of autistic and typically developing adolescents on three ...
In this study both adolescents with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and typically developing controls...
From a logical viewpoint, people must reason to as well as from interpretations in deductive reasoni...
C. Jarrold, W. Butler, E. M. Cottington, and F. Jiminez (2000) proposed that weak central coherence ...
The literature suggests that individuals with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) are deficient in their...
Reasoning from all knowledge and belief is an adaptive approach to thinking about the world. It has ...
Following the work of Frith (1970a 1970b, 1989) and Hermelin and O’Connor (1971), it was suggested t...
The literature suggests that individuals with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) are deficient in their...
Reasoning about problems with empirically false content can be hard, as the inferences that people d...
Background: The sociocommunicative problems in autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are traditionally link...
Contains fulltext : 76862.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)While autism i...
Contains fulltext : 80036.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)While autism i...
Background: The sociocommunicative problems in autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are traditionally link...
Conté: Appendix A. Supplementary dataFalse belief (FB) reasoning emerges around 4− 5 years of age in...
Background:This study presents two experiments that investigated whether children with autism were s...