Cooke N J, Breedin S D
Department of Psychology, New Mexico State University, Las Cruces 88003.
Mem Cognit. 1994 Jul;22(4):474-93. doi: 10.3758/bf03200871.
People often make erroneous predictions about the trajectories of moving objects. McCloskey (1983a, 1983b) and others have suggested that many of these errors stem from well-developed, but naive, theories of motion. The studies presented here examine the role of naive impetus theory in people's judgments of motion. Subjects with and without formal physics experience were asked to draw or select from alternatives the trajectories of moving objects that were presented in various manners. Results from two experiments indicate that both trajectory judgments and explanations were affected by specific response and display features of the problem. In addition, these data provide little evidence that naive impetus theory plays a significant role in subjects' performance; instead, they suggest that motion judgments and explanations are constructed on the fly from contextual cues and knowledge that is not necessarily naive.
人们常常对移动物体的轨迹做出错误预测。麦克洛斯基(1983年a版、1983年b版)等人指出,这些错误中有许多源于已发展完善但却幼稚的运动理论。此处呈现的研究考察了朴素冲力理论在人们运动判断中的作用。要求有和没有正规物理经验的受试者绘制或以其他方式选择以各种形式呈现的移动物体的轨迹。两项实验的结果表明,轨迹判断和解释都受到问题的特定反应和显示特征的影响。此外,这些数据几乎没有提供证据表明朴素冲力理论在受试者的表现中起重要作用;相反,它们表明运动判断和解释是根据情境线索和不一定幼稚的知识即时构建的。