THE ENDORSEMENT OF THE PREMISES - ASSUMPTION-BASED OR BELIEF-BASED REASONING

被引:62
|
作者
GEORGE, C
机构
[1] UFR de Psychologie, Université de Paris, Saint Denis, 93526
关键词
D O I
10.1111/j.2044-8295.1995.tb02548.x
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Three experiments examined the effect on reasoning of the degree of belief in the premises. In Expt 1, 84 adult participants had to evaluate their degree of confidence in the truth of conditional statements, and to evaluate the conclusion of modus ponens (MP) arguments using these statements as the major premise. The same seven-point response formal was used for both tasks. In the inference task, 48 per cent of the participants accepted all the MP arguments even when they disagreed with their major premise. The other participants considered that some or all of the conclusions were not certainly true. Moreover, they assigned a degree of belief to each conclusion which was highly correlated with the one they attributed to the major premise. Thus two modes of responding emerged, one which assumed the truth of the premises irrespective of actual beliefs about them, and one which integrated the truth status given to the premises. In Expt 2, one replication and three controls confirmed that non-endorsement of the MP arguments was due to the lack of believability of the premises. In Expt 3, on the usual three-response format, 80 adults were invited to adopt one of these two responding modes with four MP arguments, and then to shift to the other one with a new set of four MP arguments. With the appropriate instructions, assumption-based responding was adopted by only 43 per cent of the participants, and belief-based responding by 98 per cent. Three hypotheses are considered about the second mode of responding.
引用
收藏
页码:93 / 111
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Assumption-based pruning in conditional CSP
    Geller, F
    Veksler, M
    [J]. PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE OF CONSTRAINT PROGRAMMING - CP 2005, PROCEEDINGS, 2005, 3709 : 241 - 255
  • [42] Simple Contrapositive Assumption-Based Frameworks
    Heyninck, Jesse
    Arieli, Ofer
    [J]. AAMAS '19: PROCEEDINGS OF THE 18TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON AUTONOMOUS AGENTS AND MULTIAGENT SYSTEMS, 2019, : 2018 - 2020
  • [43] Fuzzy belief-based supervision
    Vorobiev, Alexandre
    Seviora, Rudolph
    [J]. ARES 2008: PROCEEDINGS OF THE THIRD INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON AVAILABILITY, SECURITY AND RELIABILITY, 2008, : 383 - +
  • [44] Assumption-Based Argumentation Equipped with Preferences
    Wakaki, Toshiko
    [J]. PRIMA 2014: PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE OF MULTI-AGENT SYSTEMS, 2014, 8861 : 116 - 132
  • [45] Conflict Resolution in Assumption-Based Frameworks
    Balaz, Martin
    Frtus, Jozef
    Flouris, Giorgos
    Homola, Martin
    Sefranek, Jan
    [J]. MULTI-AGENT SYSTEMS (EUMAS 2014), 2015, 8953 : 360 - 369
  • [46] A POSSIBILISTIC ASSUMPTION-BASED TRUTH MAINTENANCE SYSTEM WITH UNCERTAIN JUSTIFICATIONS, AND ITS APPLICATION TO BELIEF REVISION
    DUBOIS, D
    LANG, J
    PRADE, H
    [J]. LECTURE NOTES IN ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE, 1991, 515 : 87 - 106
  • [47] Assumption-based distribution of CTL model checking
    Brim L.
    Yorav K.
    Žídková J.
    [J]. International Journal on Software Tools for Technology Transfer, 2005, 7 (1) : 61 - 73
  • [48] Assumption-Based Argumentation for the Minimal Concession Strategy
    Morge, Maxime
    Mancarella, Paolo
    [J]. ARGUMENTATION IN MULTI-AGENT SYSTEMS, 2010, 6057 : 114 - 133
  • [49] Computing arguments and attacks in assumption-based argumentation
    Gaertner, Dorian
    Toni, Francesca
    [J]. IEEE INTELLIGENT SYSTEMS, 2007, 22 (06) : 24 - 33
  • [50] Simple contrapositive assumption-based argumentation frameworks
    Heyninck, Jesse
    Arieli, Ofer
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF APPROXIMATE REASONING, 2020, 121 : 103 - 124