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Related Experiment Videos

Reasoning counterfactually: combining and rending.

R Revlin1, C L Cate, T S Rouss

  • 1Psychology Department, University of California, Santa Barbara 93106, USA. revlin@psych.ucsb.edu

Memory & Cognition
|March 27, 2002
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

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People revise beliefs during counterfactual reasoning by assuming a fact is false to draw conclusions. Students prioritized general statements over specific ones when reconciling these logical conflicts.

Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Logic and Reasoning

Background:

  • Counterfactual reasoning involves revising beliefs when a presumed fact is treated as false.
  • Understanding how individuals reconcile inconsistencies is key to cognitive science.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To simulate belief revision in counterfactual reasoning.
  • To investigate how students resolve logical inconsistencies arising from counterfactual assumptions.

Main Methods:

  • Students were presented with consistent statements, then asked to accept a counterfactual assumption.
  • Participants reconciled inconsistencies between general rules, specific facts, and counterfactuals.
  • The study analyzed preferences in resolving these logical conflicts.

Main Results:

Related Experiment Videos

  • Students favored maintaining general statements as true and specific statements as false.
  • This preference was stronger when assumptions integrated categories and when real beliefs were involved.
  • Results align with natural deduction, mental models, and conceptual-integration network theories.

Conclusions:

  • Belief revision in counterfactual reasoning shows predictable patterns.
  • Cognitive models of inference adequately explain how individuals handle counterfactuals.
  • The study provides empirical support for existing theories of everyday reasoning.