The conjunction fallacy in rats

被引:0
|
作者
Valeria V. González
Sowgol Sadeghi
Linh Tran
Aaron P. Blaisdell
机构
[1] University of California Los Angeles,Department of Psychology
来源
关键词
Conjunction fallacy; Reasoning; Rats; Heuristics;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Humans and other animals are capable of reasoning. However, there are overwhelming examples of errors or anomalies in reasoning. In two experiments, we studied if rats, like humans, estimate the conjunction of two events as more likely than each event independently, a phenomenon that has been called conjunction fallacy. In both experiments, rats learned through food reinforcement to press a lever under some cue conditions but not others. Sound B was rewarded whereas Sound A was not. However, when B was presented with the visual cue Y was not rewarded, whereas AX was rewarded (i.e., A-, AX+, B+, BY-). Both visual cues were presented in the same bulb. After training, rats received test sessions in which A and B were presented with the bulb explicitly off or occluded by a metal piece. Thus, on the occluded condition, it was ambiguous whether the trials were of the elements alone (A or B) or of the compounds (AX or BY). Rats responded on the occluded condition as if the compound cues were most likely present. The second experiment investigated if this error in probability estimation in Experiment 1, could be due to a conjunction fallacy, and if this could be attenuated by increasing the ratio of element/compound trials from the original 50-50 to 70-30 and 90-10. Only the 90-10 condition (where 90% of the training trials were of just A or just B) did not show a conjunction fallacy, though it emerged in all groups with additional training. These findings open new avenues for exploring the mechanisms behind the conjunction fallacy effect.
引用
收藏
页码:1564 / 1574
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] The conjunction fallacy in rats
    Gonzalez, Valeria V.
    Sadeghi, Sowgol
    Tran, Linh
    Blaisdell, Aaron P.
    PSYCHONOMIC BULLETIN & REVIEW, 2023, 30 (04) : 1564 - 1574
  • [2] THE CONJUNCTION FALLACY
    WOLFORD, G
    TAYLOR, HA
    BECK, JR
    MEMORY & COGNITION, 1990, 18 (01) : 47 - 53
  • [3] THE CONJUNCTION FALLACY
    WOLFORD, G
    TAYLOR, H
    BECK, R
    BULLETIN OF THE PSYCHONOMIC SOCIETY, 1986, 24 (05) : 351 - 351
  • [4] UNDERSTANDING THE CONJUNCTION FALLACY - A CONJUNCTION OF EFFECTS
    CRANDALL, CS
    GREENFIELD, B
    SOCIAL COGNITION, 1986, 4 (04) : 408 - 419
  • [5] The conjunction fallacy: a misunderstanding about conjunction?
    Tentori, K
    Bonini, N
    Osherson, D
    COGNITIVE SCIENCE, 2004, 28 (03) : 467 - 477
  • [6] On the nature of the conjunction fallacy
    Moro, Rodrigo
    SYNTHESE, 2009, 171 (01) : 1 - 24
  • [7] The inverse conjunction fallacy
    Jonsson, Martin L.
    Hampton, James A.
    JOURNAL OF MEMORY AND LANGUAGE, 2006, 55 (03) : 317 - 334
  • [8] On the reality of the conjunction fallacy
    Ashley Sides
    Daniel Osherson
    Nicolao Bonini
    Riccardo Viale
    Memory & Cognition, 2002, 30 : 191 - 198
  • [9] THE CONJUNCTION FALLACY - REPLY
    WOLFORD, G
    MEMORY & COGNITION, 1991, 19 (04) : 415 - 417
  • [10] THE CONJUNCTION FALLACY - COMMENT
    BARHILLEL, M
    MEMORY & COGNITION, 1991, 19 (04) : 412 - 414