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Related Experiment Videos

Analogical transfer in the THOG task.

Cynthia S Koenig1, Richard A Griggs

  • 1University of Florida, Gainesville, USA. cskoenig@smcm.edu

The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology. A, Human Experimental Psychology
|June 19, 2004
PubMed
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Surface and structural similarity influence analogical transfer in deductive reasoning tasks. A hypothesis generation request was crucial for significant transfer in the THOG problem, impacting performance criteria.

Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Cognitive Science
  • Psychology

Background:

  • Analogical transfer is a key cognitive process.
  • Understanding factors influencing analogical transfer is crucial for learning and problem-solving.
  • The THOG problem is a standard task for studying deductive reasoning and cognitive biases.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the impact of surface and structural similarity on analogical transfer.
  • To determine the necessary conditions for significant analogical transfer in deductive reasoning.
  • To explore the role of hypothesis generation in facilitating analogical transfer.

Main Methods:

  • Four experiments were conducted with 318 undergraduate participants.
  • The Pythagoras THOG problem served as the source, and Wason's abstract THOG task as the target.

Related Experiment Videos

  • Surface similarity was manipulated by altering named exemplars, dimensional values, and dimensions.
  • Main Results:

    • Significant analogical transfer was observed across experiments manipulating surface similarity.
    • Experiment 4 revealed that a hypothesis generation request was essential for significant transfer.
    • The findings suggest that facilitation, not just transfer, is a key performance criterion.

    Conclusions:

    • Both surface and structural similarity play roles in analogical transfer.
    • Explicit hypothesis generation prompts are necessary to enable significant analogical transfer.
    • Future research should consider facilitation as a critical measure in deductive reasoning studies.