Development of deductive reasoning: Differences between factual and counterfactual conditionals

被引:0
|
作者
Rojas-Barahona, Cristian A. [1 ]
Moreno-Rios, Sergio [2 ]
Garcia-Madruga, Juan A. [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Los Andes, Escuela Psicol Pedag, Santiago, Chile
[2] Univ Granada, E-18071 Granada, Spain
[3] Univ Nacl Educ Distancia, Madrid, Spain
来源
PSICOLOGICA | 2010年 / 31卷 / 01期
关键词
MENTAL MODELS; INFERENCES; PRAGMATICS; THINKING; IF;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Development of deductive reasoning: Differences between factual and counterfactual conditionals. In this work we study how adults and children make inferences about what could have occurred but did not occur (counterfactual). For this, a deductive reasoning task with real conditional statements (or factual, of the type "if you run, you'll arrive on time") and a task contrary to reality (or counterfactual, of the type "if you had run, you would have arrived on time") are utilized and applied to participants of different ages: elementary school children of first and second grade ((x) over bar =7 years), elementary school children of fifth and sixth grade ((x) over bar =11 years), high school adolescents of third and fourth grade ((x) over bar =15 years), and adult university students ((x) over bar =23 years). Two studies were performed; the first with adults (60 participants) and the second with children of different age-groups (7, 11 and 15 years, a total of 156 participants). As many children as adults showed different patterns of inference when presented with factual and counterfactual conditionals. Comparing the frequency of inferences between adults and children, differences were observed only for the factual conditional, not for the counterfactual conditional. The results are discussed, considering mainly the Mental Models Theory.
引用
收藏
页码:1 / 24
页数:24
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Autistic Adults are Not Impaired at Maintaining or Switching Between Counterfactual and Factual Worlds: An ERP Study
    Heather J. Ferguson
    Lena Wimmer
    Jo Black
    Mahsa Barzy
    David Williams
    Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2022, 52 : 349 - 360
  • [42] Deductive Versus Probabilistic Reasoning in Healthy Adults: An EEG Analysis of Neural Differences
    Evie Malaia
    Jodi Tommerdahl
    Fred McKee
    Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2015, 44 : 533 - 544
  • [43] Deductive Versus Probabilistic Reasoning in Healthy Adults: An EEG Analysis of Neural Differences
    Malaia, Evie
    Tommerdahl, Jodi
    McKee, Fred
    JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLINGUISTIC RESEARCH, 2015, 44 (05) : 533 - 544
  • [44] Individual differences in hypothetic-deductive reasoning: Importance of cognitive skills and flexibility
    Seoane, Gloria
    Valina, Ma Dolores
    Rodriguez, Ma Soledad
    Martin, Montserrat
    Ferraces, Ma Jos
    PSICOTHEMA, 2007, 19 (02) : 206 - 211
  • [45] Conditional Reasoning and Emotional Experience: A Review of the Development of Counterfactual Thinking
    Beck, Sarah R.
    Weisberg, Daniel P.
    Burns, Patrick
    Riggs, Kevin J.
    STUDIA LOGICA, 2014, 102 (04) : 673 - 689
  • [46] Conditional Reasoning and Emotional Experience: A Review of the Development of Counterfactual Thinking
    Sarah R. Beck
    Daniel P. Weisberg
    Patrick Burns
    Kevin J. Riggs
    Studia Logica, 2014, 102 : 673 - 689
  • [47] The link between transitive reasoning and mathematics achievement in preadolescence: the role of relational processing and deductive reasoning
    Wong, Terry Tin-Yau
    Morsanyi, Kinga
    THINKING & REASONING, 2023, 29 (04) : 531 - 558
  • [48] VIEWS OF MATHEMATICS EDUCATORS ON THE ROLE OF MATHEMATICS LEARNING IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF DEDUCTIVE REASONING
    Ayalon, Michal
    Even, Ruhama
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE JOINT MEETING OF PME 32 AND PME-NA XXX, VOL 2, 2008, : 113 - 120
  • [49] Reward and fictive prediction error signals in ventral striatum: asymmetry between factual and counterfactual processing
    Santo-Angles, A.
    Fuentes-Claramonte, P.
    Argila-Plaza, I
    Guardiola-Ripoll, M.
    Almodovar-Paya, C.
    Munuera, J.
    McKenna, P. J.
    Pomarol-Clotet, E.
    Radua, J.
    BRAIN STRUCTURE & FUNCTION, 2021, 226 (05): : 1553 - 1569
  • [50] Reward and fictive prediction error signals in ventral striatum: asymmetry between factual and counterfactual processing
    A. Santo-Angles
    P. Fuentes-Claramonte
    I. Argila-Plaza
    M. Guardiola-Ripoll
    C. Almodóvar-Payá
    J. Munuera
    P. J. McKenna
    E. Pomarol-Clotet
    J. Radua
    Brain Structure and Function, 2021, 226 : 1553 - 1569