Cause and Effect
Inductive Reasoning
Hindsight Biases
The Availability Heuristic
Deductive Reasoning
Prediction Intervals
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Updated: Jun 27, 2025

Using Eye Movements Recorded in the Visual World Paradigm to Explore the Online Processing of Spoken Language
Published on: October 13, 2018
Orlando Espino1, Isabel Orenes2, Sergio Moreno-Ríos3
1Department of Cognitive, Social, and Organizational Psychology, University of La Laguna, Tenerife, Spain. oespinom@ull.edu.es.
People often misinterpret conditional statements, leading to incorrect conclusions. This study reveals how different conditional phrases like "if-then" and "only if" influence these reasoning errors in deductive logic.
Area of Science:
Background:
Human reasoning often deviates from formal logic when processing complex linguistic structures that involve multiple layers of dependency. Prior research has shown that individuals frequently succumb to cognitive biases when evaluating disjunctive or conditional statements that require the simultaneous consideration of truth and falsity. These systematic errors occur because the human mind tends to represent possibilities that are true rather than those that are false, a phenomenon known as the truth principle. Mental model theory suggests that people construct simplified representations of premises to reduce cognitive load, often leading to the omission of critical logical alternatives. While many studies have explored simple syllogisms and basic propositional logic, the specific impact of varying linguistic markers on complex disjunctions involving conditional threats remains under-examined. Researchers have long debated whether these errors stem from a lack of logical competence or from the pragmatic interpretation of natural language. This absence of evidence motivated the current investigation into how specific phrasing alters logical outcomes in scenarios where one of two conditionals must be false.
Purpose Of The Study:
This research evaluates how distinct linguistic formulations of conditionals influence the generation of fallacious logical conclusions in complex deductive tasks. The investigators sought to determine if the "if-then" structure produces different cognitive outputs compared to "only if" or "if and only if" markers when embedded in a disjunctive context. By manipulating the phrasing of a classic logical puzzle involving a robber's threat, the team examined the robustness of the illusory response across different semantic frames. The study addresses whether participants consistently fail to recognize the valid conclusion—that the threat will not be carried out—when presented with mutually exclusive conditional premises. Each experiment targeted a specific variation of the conditional to map the boundaries of human deductive accuracy and the flexibility of mental models. The work clarifies how the mental representation of the standard conditional differs from the biconditional "if and only if" in complex logical contexts.
Main Methods:
The researchers conducted three distinct experiments to assess participant responses to varied conditional expressions within a controlled psychological framework. Subjects encountered a scenario where a robber presents two mutually exclusive options involving the concealment of a safe combination and a subsequent threat of lethal force. The first experiment utilized the standard "if-then" conditional to establish a baseline for the illusory response, where participants must choose between "I kill you," "I don't kill you," or "I may or may not kill you." In the second iteration, the team substituted the phrasing with "only if" to observe shifts in deductive patterns and determine if this marker prompts a more nuanced evaluation of the possibilities. The final experiment employed the biconditional "if and only if" to test if more restrictive logic reduces the frequency of the illusion or leads to a different type of reasoning error. Participants selected their conclusions from a set of options, and their choices were analyzed to see how the linguistic structure influenced the likelihood of selecting the logically valid but counter-intuitive "I don't kill you." Statistical comparisons were then performed to evaluate the frequency of the illusory response across the three experimental conditions.
Main Results:
Participants predominantly inferred the illusory conclusion "I kill you" when presented with the "if-then" conditional structure, demonstrating a clear failure to apply formal logic. This finding confirms that the standard conditional phrasing triggers a systematic failure to account for the falsity of one premise in a disjunction of two conditionals. When the researchers utilized the "only if" expression, subjects shifted their responses toward the uncertain conclusion "I may or may not kill you," indicating a change in how the possibilities were represented. The biconditional "if and only if" resulted in a nearly equal distribution of choices between the illusory and uncertain options, suggesting that the biconditional phrasing creates a unique cognitive conflict. Data indicated that the specific linguistic marker significantly dictates the mental model constructed by the reasoner, with "if-then" being the most prone to the illusory effect. These observed variations provide empirical support for theories that link logical errors to the way language frames possibilities and the inherent limitations of working memory.
Conclusions:
The findings demonstrate that illusory inferences are not uniform across all types of conditional expressions and are heavily influenced by semantic framing. Linguistic nuances in how a threat or condition is framed can either exacerbate or mitigate logical fallacies, suggesting that human reasoning is not purely formal. These results suggest that the human reasoning system is highly sensitive to the semantic constraints of "only if" versus "if-then," which has implications for how information is presented in critical contexts. Future research should explore how these linguistic effects manifest in high-stakes decision-making environments where the interpretation of conditional threats is paramount. The study reinforces the necessity of considering linguistic pragmatics and mental model theory when developing comprehensive models of human cognition and deductive performance. Understanding these patterns helps explain why certain types of communication lead to predictable misunderstandings in legal, medical, or crisis scenarios where conditional logic is frequently employed.
In this study, illusory inferences led most participants to conclude "I kill you" when presented with two mutually exclusive "if-then" conditionals. This occurs because reasoners fail to consider the logical requirement that one of the two conditional statements must be false in the given scenario.
When the researchers replaced "if-then" with the "only if" expression, participants predominantly selected the conclusion "I may or may not kill you." This shift demonstrates that the linguistic marker "only if" alters the mental models people construct compared to standard conditional phrasing.
The team used the "if and only if" biconditional to determine if a more restrictive logical operator would eliminate the illusory response. The results showed that this phrasing caused participants to select both the illusory and uncertain options with similar frequency, revealing unique cognitive processing.
The study's findings are confined to disjunctions of two conditionals where only one option is true, such as "If P then Q; otherwise, if not P then Q." The researchers specifically examined how "if-then," "only if," and "if and only if" markers influence these specific illusory inferences.
The study's authors propose that their results shed light on the main theories of deductive reasoning by showing how linguistic markers dictate mental models. They conclude that the specific expression of a conditional is a primary driver of whether a person reaches a valid or illusory conclusion.