School of Psychology, University of Sydney.
Department of Psychology, Northwestern University.
Cogn Sci. 2021 Sep;45(9):e13036. doi: 10.1111/cogs.13036.
There is a critical inconsistency in the literature on analogical retrieval. On the one hand, a vast set of laboratory studies has found that people often fail to retrieve past experiences that share deep relational commonalities, even when they would be useful for reasoning about a current problem. On the other hand, historical studies and naturalistic research show clear evidence of remindings based on deep relational commonalities. Here, we examine a possible explanation for this inconsistency-namely, that remindings based on relational principles increase as a function of expertise. To test this claim, we devised a simple analogy-generation task that can be administered across a wide range of expertise. We presented common events as the bases from which to generate analogies. Although the events themselves were unrelated to geoscience, we found that when the event was explainable in terms of a causal principle that is prominent in geoscience, expert geoscientists were likely to spontaneously produce analogies from geoscience that relied on the same principle. Further, for these examples, prompts to produce causal analogies increased their frequency among nonscientists and scientists from another domain, but not among expert geoscientists (whose spontaneous causal retrieval levels were already high). In contrast, when the example was best explained by a principle outside of geoscience, all groups required prompting to produce substantial numbers of analogies based on causal principles. Overall, this pattern suggests that the spontaneous use of causal principles is characteristic of experts. We suggest that expert scientists adopt habitual patterns of encoding according to the key relational principles in their domain, and that this contributes to their propensity to spontaneously retrieve relational matches. We discuss implications for the nature of expertise and for science instruction and assessment.
文献中类比检索存在一个关键的不一致。一方面,大量实验室研究发现,人们经常无法检索到具有深层关系共性的过去经验,即使这些经验对于推理当前问题很有用。另一方面,历史研究和自然主义研究清楚地表明,基于深层关系共性的提醒是存在的。在这里,我们考察了这种不一致的一个可能解释,即基于关系原则的提醒会随着专业知识的增加而增加。为了检验这一说法,我们设计了一个简单的类比生成任务,可以在广泛的专业知识范围内进行。我们以常见事件为基础生成类比。尽管这些事件本身与地球科学无关,但我们发现,当这些事件可以用地球科学中突出的因果原则来解释时,地球科学专家很可能会自发地从地球科学中生成依赖于同一原则的类比。此外,对于这些例子,生成因果类比的提示会增加非科学家和来自另一个领域的科学家生成此类类比的频率,但不会增加专家地球科学家的频率(他们自发的因果检索水平已经很高)。相比之下,当例子最好用地球科学之外的原则来解释时,所有群体都需要提示才能生成大量基于因果原则的类比。总的来说,这种模式表明,因果原则的自发使用是专家的特征。我们认为,专家科学家采用根据其领域中的关键关系原则进行编码的习惯模式,这有助于他们自发地检索关系匹配。我们讨论了这对专业知识的本质以及对科学教学和评估的影响。