Haigh Matthew
Department of Psychology, Northumbria University, UK.
Adv Cogn Psychol. 2016 Sep 30;12(3):145-149. doi: 10.5709/acp-0193-5. eCollection 2016.
The Cognitive Reflection Test (CRT) is a hugely influential problem solving task that measures individual differences in the propensity to reflect on and override intuitive (but incorrect) solutions. The validity of this three-item measure depends on participants being naïve to its materials and objectives. Evidence from 142 volunteers recruited online suggests this is often not the case. Over half of the sample had previously seen at least one of the problems, predominantly through research participation or the media. These participants produced substantially higher CRT scores than those without prior exposure (2.36 vs. 1.48), with the majority scoring at ceiling level. Participants that had previously seen a specific problem (e.g., the bat and ball problem) nearly always solved that problem correctly. These data suggest the CRT may have been widely invalidated. As a minimum, researchers must control for prior exposure to the three problems and begin to consider alternative, extended measures of cognitive reflection.
认知反思测试(CRT)是一项极具影响力的解决问题任务,它衡量个体在反思并推翻直观(但错误)解决方案的倾向方面的差异。这个三项测量方法的有效性取决于参与者对其材料和目标并不了解。来自142名在线招募的志愿者的证据表明情况往往并非如此。超过一半的样本此前至少见过其中一个问题,主要是通过参与研究或媒体。这些参与者的CRT得分显著高于那些之前未接触过的参与者(2.36对1.48),大多数得分达到满分。之前见过特定问题(如球拍和球问题)的参与者几乎总能正确解决该问题。这些数据表明CRT可能已被广泛证伪。至少,研究人员必须控制对这三个问题的先前接触情况,并开始考虑认知反思的替代、扩展测量方法。