Reducing cognitive complexity in a hypothetico-deductive reasoning task |
| |
Authors: | Pam Marek Richard A. Griggs Cynthia S. Koenig |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. St Michael's College, Colchester, VT, USA;2. University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA |
| |
Abstract: | ![]() The confusion/non-consequential thinking explanation proposed by Newstead, Girotto, and Legrenzi (1995) for poor performance on Wason's THOG problem (a hypothetico-deductive reasoning task) was examined in three experiments with 300 participants. In general, as the cognitive complexity of the problem and the possibility of non-consequential thinking were reduced, correct performance increased. Significant but weak facilitation (33-40% correct) was found in Experiment 1 for THOG classification instructions that did not include the indeterminate response option. Substantial facilitation (up to 75% correct) was obtained in Experiment 2 with O'Brien et al.'s (1990) one-other-THOG classification instruction. In Experiment 3, a revised version of O'Brien et al.'s pre-test problem format also led to substantial facilitation, even with the use of the standard three-choice THOG classification instruction. These findings are discussed in terms of Newstead et al.'s theoretical proposal and possible attentional factors. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|