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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Developmental and content effects in reasoning with causal conditionals.

Pierre BarrouilletStéphane QuinnHenry Markovits

subject

AdultDeductive reasoningAdolescentAntecedent (logic)media_common.quotation_subjectConcept FormationExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyCognitionModels PsychologicalCausalityTerm (time)CausalityDenialChild DevelopmentCognitionPremiseDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyCognitive developmentHumansPsychologyChildSocial psychologyProblem SolvingCognitive psychologymedia_common

description

Abstract Two predictions derived from Markovits and Barrouillet's (2001) developmental model of conditional reasoning were tested in a study in which 72 twelve-year-olds, 80 fifteen-year-olds, and 104 adults received a paper-and-pencil test of conditional reasoning with causal premises (“if cause P then effect Q”). First, we predicted that conditional premises would induce more correct uncertainty responses to the Affirmation of the consequent and Denial of the antecedent forms when the antecedent term is weakly associated to the consequent than when the two are strongly associated and that this effect would decrease with age. Second, uncertainty responding to the Denial of the antecedent form (“P is not true”) should be easier when the formulation of the minor premise invites retrieval of alternate antecedents (“if something other than P is true”). The results were consistent with the hypotheses and indicate the importance of retrieval processes in understanding developmental patterns in conditional reasoning with familiar premises.

10.1006/jecp.2001.2652https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/11884089