Sperber D, Cara F, Girotto V
Centre de Recherche en Epistémologie Appliquée, Ecole Polytechnique, Paris, France.
Cognition. 1995 Oct;57(1):31-95. doi: 10.1016/0010-0277(95)00666-m.
We propose a general and predictive explanation of the Wason Selection Task (where subjects are asked to select evidence for testing a conditional "rule"). Our explanation is based on a reanalysis of the task, and on Relevance Theory. We argue that subjects' selections in all true versions of the Selection Task result from the following procedure. Subjects infer from the rule directly testable consequences. They infer them in their order of accessibility, and stop when the resulting interpretation of the rule meets their expectations of relevance. Subjects then select the cards that may test the consequences they have inferred from the rule. Order of accessibility of consequences and expectations of relevance vary with rule and context, and so, therefore, does subjects' performance. By devising appropriate rule-context pairs, we predict that correct performance can be elicited in any conceptual domain. We corroborate this prediction with four experiments. We argue that past results properly reanalyzed confirm our account. We discuss the relevance of the Selection Task to the study of reasoning.
我们对沃森选择任务(要求受试者选择用于检验条件“规则”的证据)提出了一种通用且具有预测性的解释。我们的解释基于对该任务的重新分析以及关联理论。我们认为,在选择任务的所有真实版本中,受试者的选择源于以下过程。受试者从规则中推断出可直接检验的结果。他们按照可及性顺序进行推断,并在对规则的最终解释符合其关联预期时停止。然后,受试者选择可能检验他们从规则中推断出的结果的卡片。结果的可及性顺序和关联预期会因规则和语境而异,因此受试者的表现也会如此。通过设计合适的规则 - 语境对,我们预测在任何概念领域都能引发正确的表现。我们通过四个实验证实了这一预测。我们认为,对过去结果进行恰当的重新分析证实了我们的观点。我们讨论了选择任务与推理研究的相关性。