6533b82bfe1ef96bd128d765

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Majority and minority influence, task representation and inductive reasoning

Paolo LegrenziGabriel MugnyJuan Antonio PérezFabrizio Butera

subject

Social PsychologyAlternative hypothesisMinority influenceInductive reasoningRepresentation (mathematics)Set (psychology)PsychologySocial psychologyWason selection taskTest (assessment)Task (project management)

description

One hundred and fifty-five participants had to solve a set of 2–4–6 like reasoning problems (Wason, 1960), in which they were told which hypothesis a majority (or a minority) proposed, as well as which example was used for the test. In a 2 × 2 design, participants were also told that the problems allowed either one single correct answer or several possible answers. Results show that, when the source is a majority and the problem allows one single answer, most participants adopt the source's hypothesis and use confirmatory testing. On the contrary, it is when the source is a minority and the problem allows several answers that most participants give alternative hypotheses and use disconfirmation.

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