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E-raamat: Methods of Thought: Individual Differences in Reasoning Strategies [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

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How do people make inferences? How do their reasoning processes differ and why? Methods of Thought attempts to answer these questions by looking in detail at the different reasoning strategies people apply, how these are acquired, how they are selected and how use of these strategies is influenced by individual and task properties. Focusing on empirical data and research into deductive reasoning tasks, this book summarizes current trends in the field and helps us to understand how individual differences in reasoning impact on other studies of higher cognitive abilities in humans.

Contributors include researchers who have shown that people make deductions by using a variety of strategies, and others who have found that deductive reasoning problems provide a useful test-bed for investigating general theories of strategy development. Together, it is shown that these general theories derived from other domains have important implications for deductive reasoning, and also that findings by reasoning researchers have wider consequences for general theories of strategy development. This book will be of interest to anyone studying or working in the fields of reasoning, problem solving, and cognitive development, as well as cognitive science in general.
List of contributors
xi
Introduction: Individual differences in reasoning strategies 1(10)
Maxwell J. Roberts
Elizabeth J. Newton
References
7(4)
1 Strategic aspects of human cognition: Implications for understanding human reasoning
11(20)
Patrick Lemaire
Ludovic Fabre
General issues in cognitive strategies
11(8)
Implications for investigating strategic aspects of reasoning
19(7)
Acknowledgements
26(1)
References
26(5)
2 Rethinking logical reasoning skills from a strategy perspective
31(26)
Bradley J. Morris
Christian D. Schunn
Strategy use in logical reasoning
32(11)
Task characteristics and situational niches
43(4)
Experiment
47(7)
Acknowledgements
54(1)
Appendix: Example problems
54(1)
References
55(2)
3 Working memory and strategies in reasoning
57(24)
K. J. Gilhooly
Working memory
59(2)
Strategies and working memory
61(2)
Reasoning: Theoretical approaches
63(2)
Working memory in propositional reasoning: Empirical results
65(4)
Working memory in syllogistic reasoning: Empirical results
69(6)
Working memory and strategies in reasoning: Overview
75(3)
References
78(3)
4 Verbal and spatial strategies in reasoning
81(26)
Alison M. Bacon
Simon J. Handley
Stephen E. Newstead
Syllogistic reasoning
82(4)
Experiment 1
86(6)
The role of working memory in reasoning strategies
92(3)
Experiment 2
95(2)
Verbal and spatial strategies in transitive inference
97(1)
Experiment 3
98(2)
General discussion and conclusions
100(3)
Acknowledgements
103(1)
References
103(4)
5 Adaptive strategy application in linear reasoning
107(22)
Vicky Dierckx
Andre Vandierendonck
Strategies in reasoning
109(1)
Adaptivity and task complexity
110(6)
Conflicts in adaptivity
116(5)
Discussion
121(4)
Acknowledgements
125(1)
References
125(4)
6 Strategy usage in a simple reasoning task: Overview and implications
129(30)
Maxwell J. Roberts
Elizabeth J. Newton
Strategy usage and the compass point directions task
134(2)
Methods
136(3)
Results and discussion
139(13)
Conclusions and implications
152(5)
References
157(2)
7 The window of opportunity: A model for strategy discovery
159(24)
Elizabeth J. Newton
Maxwell J. Roberts
Investigating the window of opportunity model
162(5)
Method
167(3)
Results
170(7)
Discussion
177(4)
References
181(2)
Afterword: What do we know, and what do we need to know about reasoning strategies? 183(4)
Maxwell J. Roberts
Elizabeth J. Newton
Author index 187(6)
Subject index 193
Maxwell J. Roberts is Lecturer in the Department of Psychology, University of Essex. Elizabeth Newton is Research Fellow in the Department of Human Communication Science, University College London.