Sato Yuri, Sugimoto Yutaro, Ueda Kazuhiro
Department of General Systems Studies, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, The University of Tokyo.
Global Centre for Advanced Research on Logic and Sensibility, Keio University.
Cogn Sci. 2018 Mar;42(2):691-707. doi: 10.1111/cogs.12553. Epub 2017 Oct 19.
In this study, Knauff and Johnson-Laird's (2002) visual impedance hypothesis (i.e., mental representations with irrelevant visual detail can impede reasoning) is applied to the domain of external representations and diagrammatic reasoning. We show that the use of real objects and augmented real (AR) objects can control human interpretation and reasoning about conditionals. As participants made inferences (e.g., an invalid one from "if P then Q" to "P"), they also moved objects corresponding to premises. Participants who moved real objects made more invalid inferences than those who moved AR objects and those who did not manipulate objects (there was no significant difference between the last two groups). Our results showed that real objects impeded conditional reasoning, but AR objects did not. These findings are explained by the fact that real objects may over-specify a single state that exists, while AR objects suggest multiple possibilities.
在本研究中,克瑙夫和约翰逊 - 莱尔德(2002)的视觉阻抗假说(即具有无关视觉细节的心理表征会阻碍推理)被应用于外部表征和图表推理领域。我们表明,真实物体和增强现实(AR)物体的使用可以控制人类对条件句的解释和推理。当参与者进行推理时(例如,从“如果P那么Q”得出无效推理“P”),他们也会移动与前提相对应的物体。移动真实物体的参与者比移动AR物体的参与者以及不操作物体的参与者做出了更多无效推理(后两组之间没有显著差异)。我们的结果表明,真实物体会阻碍条件推理,但AR物体不会。这些发现可以通过以下事实来解释:真实物体可能过度指定了一种现存的单一状态,而AR物体则暗示了多种可能性。