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Reasoning. 2 Types of Reasoning. Deduction Deductive arguments: If the premises are true (and the argument's form is valid) then the conclusion must be true. Induction Inductive arguments: The premises support the conclusion, but do not guarantee that it is true. . Deduction. Syllogisms
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2 Types of Reasoning • Deduction • Deductive arguments: If the premises are true (and the argument's form is valid) then the conclusion must be true. • Induction • Inductive arguments: The premises support the conclusion, but do not guarantee that it is true.
Deduction • Syllogisms • Conditional Reasoning
Categorical Syllogisms • Major premise, minor premise, conclusion • Can be represented with Venn diagrams (all, some, none) • Aristotle: Prescriptions for reasoning correctly with syllogisms • Empirical observations: Descriptions of actual reasoning with syllogisms
Reasoning with Syllogisms • "Atmosphere effect" • "Some parents are scientists; All scientists are drivers, therefore:" • Some parents are drivers • Some drivers are parents • Both conclusions are valid, but the first is more likely to be drawn. • One explanation: Johnson-Laird & Steedman (1979) model of syllogistic reasoning; checking validity of arguments is done by checking for a "path" from premises to conclusion.
Reasoning with Syllogisms • High-imagery and high-relatedness syllogisms are solved more accurately than more abstract syllogisms (Cement & Falmagne, 1986) • High relatedness: Some politicians are lawyers. • Low relatedness: Some politicians are farmers.
A (It rained today) B (The sidewalk is wet) If A then B (If it rained today then the sidewalk is wet) True True True True False False False True True False False True Conditional Reasoning (If-Then)Prescription: Truth Tables
Conditional Reasoning:Prescriptive Rules • Propositional Logic • Modus Ponens • If A, then B • A • Therefore B • Modus Tollens • If A, then B • Not B • Therefore not A
Conditional Reasoning: the Wason Selection Task • Subject is shown 4 cards: E F 4 7 • Each card has a letter on one side, a number on the other. • Hypothesis: "If a card has a vowel on one side, it has an even number on the other." • Task: Choose the cards you should turn over to test this hypothesis • Which cards would you turn over? Clickhere for the correct answer and a frequent error.
Hypothesis Testing and the Confirmation Bias (Wason, 1960) • “2, 4, 6” – What is the rule? • Generate lists of 3 numbers to test your rule. • Subjects hypothesised the rule "ascending by 2" and generated test lists that fit the rule to test it. • The actual rule was "any ascending sequence"; so 2, 4, 5 would fit the rule also, but subjects never tried this. • The tendency to construct tests consistent with our hypotheses is the confirmation bias.
Inductive Reasoning • Estimating probabilities -- because inductive reasoning involves having evidence that supports but does not prove a conclusion, correct inductive reasoning is a matter of correctly estimating the probability that the conclusion is true based on the available evidence. • Bayes' Theorum – a prescriptive rule
Deviations from Correct Bayesian Reasoning • Neglecting Base Rates • Under-estimating the importance of new evidence
Why do we make these mistakes? • Heuristics – mental shortcuts • Availability • Adjustment and Anchoring • Representativeness • Why do we use heuristics?