6533b82dfe1ef96bd1291457
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Is there contextuality in behavioural and social systems?
Ru ZhangJanne V. KujalaEhtibar N. Dzhafarovsubject
Matching (statistics)Class (set theory)Computer scienceGeneral Mathematicsinconsistent connectednessFOS: Physical sciencesGeneral Physics and AstronomyWorking hypothesisPublic opinion01 natural sciences050105 experimental psychology0103 physical sciencesFOS: Mathematicscontextuality0501 psychology and cognitive sciences010306 general physicsta515Quantum Physicsbusiness.industryOptical illusionProbability (math.PR)ta11105 social sciencescyclic systemsGeneral EngineeringKochen–Specker theorem81P13 81Q99 60A99 81P13 81Q99 60A99 81P13 81Q99 60A99Social systemFOS: Biological sciencesQuantitative Biology - Neurons and CognitionNeurons and Cognition (q-bio.NC)Quantum Physics (quant-ph)businessSocial experimentMathematics - ProbabilityCognitive psychologydescription
Most behavioral and social experiments aimed at revealing contextuality are confined to cyclic systems with binary outcomes. In quantum physics, this broad class of systems includes as special cases Klyachko-Can-Binicioglu-Shumovsky-type, Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen-Bell-type, and Suppes-Zanotti-Leggett-Garg-type systems. The theory of contextuality known as Contextuality-by-Default allows one to define and measure contextuality in all such system, even if there are context-dependent errors in measurements, or if something in the contexts directly interacts with the measurements. This makes the theory especially suitable for behavioral and social systems, where direct interactions of "everything with everything" are ubiquitous. For cyclic systems with binary outcomes the theory provides necessary and sufficient conditions for noncontextuality, and these conditions are known to be breached in certain quantum systems. We review several behavioral and social data sets (from polls of public opinion to visual illusions to conjoint choices to word combinations to psychophysical matching), and none of these data provides any evidence for contextuality. Our working hypothesis is that this may be a broadly applicable rule: behavioral and social systems are noncontextual, i.e., all "contextual effects" in them result from the ubiquitous dependence of response distributions on the elements of contexts other than the ones to which the response is presumably or normatively directed.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
---|---|---|---|---|
2015-04-28 | Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences |