Individual differences in logical intuitions on reasoning problems presented under two-response paradigm |
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Authors: | Roman Burič |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, Faculty of Arts, Comenius University, Bratislava, Slovakia https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3762-3354 |
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Abstract: | ABSTRACT Studies on individual differences in susceptibility to cognitive biases have identified several cognitive dispositions which were thought to predict reasoning by contributing to the efficiency of analytic thought. However, hybrid models suggest that differences between reasoners may arise already in the intuitive stages of the reasoning process. To address this possibility, we examined standard individual difference measures, mindware instantiation, and conflict detection efficiency as predictors of the accuracy on conflict problems presented under a two-response paradigm. We found that almost half of conflict reasoning problems were solved correctly already at the initial response stage and that the individual differences in initial reasoning performance were predicted by participants’ cognitive reflection, mindware instantiation, and detection efficiency. The findings advance the specification of hybrid dual-process models and provide corroborating evidence that a part of the link between bias susceptibility and cognitive dispositions is due to differences in intuitive processing. |
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Keywords: | Two-response paradigm hybrid model conflict detection mindware instantiation individual differences |
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