Logo image
Reasoning with conditionals: Does every counterexample count? It's frequency that counts
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Reasoning with conditionals: Does every counterexample count? It's frequency that counts

Sonja M. Geiger and Klaus Oberauer
Memory & cognition, Vol.35(8), pp.2060-2074
2007
PMID: 18265621

Abstract

Psychology Psychology, Experimental Social Sciences
A series of experiments investigated what determines people's degree of belief in conditionals and their readiness to draw inferences from diem. Information on the frequency of exceptions to conditional rules was contrasted with information about the number of different disabling conditions causing these exceptions. Experiments I and 2, using conditionals with arbitrary contents, revealed a strong effect of frequency information and no effect of disabling information. Experiment 3 established that, in the absence of frequency information, the disabling condition information used in Experiments I and 2 affected belief in the conditionals and inference acceptance, as has been found in many previous studies (Byrne, 1989; DeNeys, Schaeken, & d'Ydewalle, 2003b). Experiment 4 extended the results of Experiments I and 2 to everyday conditionals. The results show that belief in a conditional, and the confidence in inferences subsequently drawn from it, both depend on the subjective conditional probability of the consequent given the antecedent. This probability is estimated from the relative frequency of exceptions regardless of what causes them.

Details

UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This output has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#3 Good Health and Well-Being

Source: InCites

Metrics

InCites Highlights

These are selected metrics from InCites Benchmarking & Analytics tool, related to this output

Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
6 Social Sciences
6.73 Social Psychology
6.73.2034 Conditional Reasoning
Web Of Science research areas
Psychology, Experimental
ESI research areas
Psychiatry/Psychology
Logo image