Evolutionary Psychology, Workshop 2. Domain-Specific Reasoning.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
WASON CARD SORT: INTRODUCTION Week 2 Practical. WEEK 2 PRACTICALWASON CARD SORT WEEK 1 WEEK 2 WEEK 3 WEEK 4 WEEK 5 WEEK 6 WEEK 7 WEEK 8 WEEK 9 WEEK 10.
Advertisements

Correction, feedback and assessment: Their role in learning
A2 PSYCHOLOGY LANA CROSBIESlide 1 PERSPECTIVES NATURE - NURTURE Nature – is the view espoused by nativists. Nature refers not simply to abilities present.
Science as a Process Chapter 1 Section 2.
Deductive Reasoning. Are the following syllogism valid? A syllogism is valid if the conclusion follows from the premises All soldiers are sadistic Some.
Evolutionary Psychology, Lecture 2 What is Evolutionary Psychology?
Descriptive Approach Pragmatic Reasoning Schemas (Cheng & Holyoak)
 Cognitive Modules › Background  Wason Selection Task › Purpose › Puzzles vs Social Contract problems  Fiddick & Erlich’s Paper › Introduction › Methods.
The SOCIAL CONTRACT. Trivers – Reciprocal Altruism and the Human Psychological System Humans have an acute sense sense of fairness and a built in “cheating.
5.1 day 2 Simulations! .
Wason’s selection task
Evolutionary Psychology, Workshop 3: Altruism and Cooperation.
Logical Reasoning: Deduction. Logic A domain-general system of reasoning Deductive reasoning System for constructing proofs –What must be true given certain.
Cooperation Reciprocators, Cheaters, and Everyone Else.
Chapter 13 Reasoning and Decision-Making. Some Questions to Consider What kinds of errors do people make in reasoning? What kinds of reasoning “traps”
Chapter 16: Evolution and Human Behavior Minds/brains are products of Natural Selection Evolutionary Psychology Human Universals Evolution of Culture Human.
Chapter 5 Introduction to Inferential Statistics.
Evolutionary Psychology, Workshop 11: Controllability of Mate Value.
Reaching a Verdict.
Slide 5.1 Saunders, Lewis and Thornhill, Research Methods for Business Students, 5 th Edition, © Mark Saunders, Philip Lewis and Adrian Thornhill 2009.
SELECTION & ASSESSMENT SESSION FIVE: A CRITICAL REVIEW OF SELECTION INTERVIEWS.
Part 3 – REFUTING OPPOSING ARGUMENTS.  Before you start writing an argumentative essay, I strongly suggest you to prepare an outline and first, write.
Performance Management
Thinking Actively in a Social Context T A S C.
UMBC  CSEE   1 Inference in First-Order Logic Chapter 9 Some material adopted from notes by.
The human 3 of 3 1 Lecture 4 chapter 1 the human 3 of 3.
Chapter 4: Local integration 1: Reasoning & evolutionary psychology.
The human 3 of 3 U2Mvo&feature=player_embedded the human 3 of 31.
Evolution of Logical Reasoning
HOW TO CRITIQUE AN ARGUMENT
CHAPTER 15: Tests of Significance The Basics ESSENTIAL STATISTICS Second Edition David S. Moore, William I. Notz, and Michael A. Fligner Lecture Presentation.
Biological explanations of aggression Hormonal mechanism.
Evolutionary Psychology. Evolved Mechanisms ALL psychological theories imply evolved psychological mechanisms –Where did these mechanisms come from? –Why.
The Cognitive Perspective Computers vs. Humans. Starter (10 mins) Name the 5 perspectives in Psychology. Name the 5 perspectives in Psychology. Name 3.
Cognitive Science - Project Presentation Domain-Specific Reasoning: Social Contracts and Cheating - Jayant Sharma.
Chapter Eight The Evolutionary Approach: Change Over Time.
Reasoning deduction, induction, abduction Problem solving.
THE scientific study of behaviour and mental process.
THE scientific study of behaviour and mental process.
How to structure good history writing Always put an introduction which explains what you are going to talk about. Always put a conclusion which summarises.
Cognitive Processes PSY 334 Chapter 10 – Reasoning.
CHAPTER 15: Tests of Significance The Basics ESSENTIAL STATISTICS Second Edition David S. Moore, William I. Notz, and Michael A. Fligner Lecture Presentation.
Critical Thinking  A key academic skill  Required for successful study.
Journal 9/8/15 Is there anything in your life that you are 100% certain about? Anything you know for sure? Objective Tonight’s Homework To learn about.
Cognitive Adaptations for Social Exchange Leda Cosmides and John Tooby presented by Nat Twarog.
EXAM SKILLS: PAPER ONE: QUESTIONS. CARTOON See cartoon questions in paper two section.
Explanations of Autism Individual Differences. Cognitive Explanations Individual Differences.
Chapter 2: Thinking and Reading Critically ENG 113: Composition I.
HORMONAL MECHANISMS Lesson three. Neural mechanisms How does the research support the N.M theory? Crockett et al (2008) carried out a repeated measures.
Evaluation of Sources and Conclusion IB History. Evaluation of Sources ► This section of the paper should be a critical evaluation of two important sources.
Is domain-specific reasoning in conditional reasoning tasks really domain-specific? The 2 nd London Reasoning Workshop 28-29/08/2007 Akira Nakagaki (Waseda.
Options in Applied Psychology G543 Generic exam advice.
Chapter 2 Section 1 Conducting Research Obj: List and explain the steps scientists follow in conducting scientific research.
 You will not receive credit for your points unless you have made a comparison.  In a lot of answers not enough detail was given, or a comparison was.
Reasoning Test CEEMEA Campus. 2 Designed to assess cognitive skills Multiple choice, 65 minutes, 40-question paper-and-pencil, supervised test 3 Question.
Desert Island. Social Influence PSYB2 Social Influence ‘Efforts by one or more individuals to change the attitudes, beliefs, perceptions or behaviours.
Scientific/Mathematical Thinking and Human Nature Uri Leron Technion – Israel Institute of Technology Submitted to The Journal of Half-Baked Ideas.
Solomon Asch’s 1951 conformity experiment
How to get started with critical writing
Social Influence Lesson 6.
Cooperation within Groups
How accurate is the “Dad’s Army view” of the Home Guard?
Ψ Welcome to Psychology
Research Methods.
Problems with Kohlberg’s method
Research Methods in Psychology
SLT/Behaviourist approach
IS THE RESEARCH MEASURING WHAT IT AIMED TO MEASURE?
Reciprocity and Cooperation
The Cognitive Perspective
Presentation transcript:

Evolutionary Psychology, Workshop 2. Domain-Specific Reasoning.

Aims of the Workshop. z1. To critically review evidence concerning domain-specific reasoning as measured by performance on selection tasks. z2. To assess domain specificity from data obtained using different versions of the Wason Task. zPrior to this session you were asked to present 4 participants with 2 versions of the Wason task. zWe will firstly review domain-specificity as assessed by performance on selection tasks, and relate our findings to this evidence.

Domain-Specific Reasoning. zThe Standard Social Science Model assumes that the brain contains content-independent, general-purpose reasoning devices. zIf this is so, then we should solve different logical reasoning problems in the same manner, with the same success. zThis is not so. zWhen reasoning tasks involve spotting someone cheating on a social contract performance is improved. zEvolutionary psychologists thus argue that the brain is modular, i.e. consists of content-dependent, domain- specific reasoning devices.

Neuropsychological Evidence. zEvidence for such domain-specific reasoning has so far come from performance on logic problems and thus lacks ecological validity. zHowever, Stone et al., (2002) recently reported the case of RM who had suffered extensive brain damage affecting the orbitofrontal cortex, anterior temporal cortex and the amygdala. zWhile he performed normally on Wason-type logic problems, when the problem involved the violation of a social contract he was impaired. zThis provides neurological evidence that reasoning about social exchange can be selectively impaired.

Standard Version of the Wason Task zIndicate only the card(s) you definitely need to turn over to see if the documents of any of these people violate the following rule. zIf a student is rated D, then their documents must be marked with a 3. FD37 Correct answer: D & 7 (P and not-Q). Performance is poor on this version PNot-QQNot-P

Wason Task, Social Contract zYou are serving behind the bar of a city centre pub and will lose your job unless you enforce the following rule: zIf a person is drinking beer, then they must be over 18 years old. zIndicate only the card(s) you definitely need to turn over to see if any of these people are breaking this rule. z Drinking Coke Drinking Beer 25 years old 16 years old Correct answer: Drinking beer and 16 years old & 7 (P and not-Q). Performance improves in this social contract version PNot-QQNot-P

Other Explanations. zHowever, suppose that we have general-purpose reasoning skills whose design makes us more likely to produce logically-correct answers for familiar thematic rules? zAvailability Theory suggests that a persons past experiences create associational links between terms mentioned in tasks of logical reasoning. zThus, the more familiar the problem the better the performance. zSocial contract theory (Cosmides & Tooby, 1992) however suggests that familiarity with a situation will have no influence on performance. zCosmides (1989) tested both theories using familiar and unfamiliar situations:

Comparisons Between Predictions.

Clear-Thinking. zPerhaps the content of social contracts simply facilitates logical reasoning and is not to do with domain-specific reasoning. zWe can test this by using switched social contracts i.e. by presenting Wason-type problems with the logical argument switched around. zClear-thinking theory predicts that performance will be uniformly bad on these more difficult tasks. zSocial Contract theory predicts that changing the argument will have no effect on a social contract problem. zCosmides (1989) showed that again social contract theory predictions were supported.

Comparisons Between Predictions

Perspective and Reasoning. zIn all social exchange situations we can play two roles, e.g. as an employer providing a pension to an employee. zFrom the employers perspective, cheating is when an overtime bonus is paid out but the employee did not actually work the shift. zFrom the employees perspective, cheating is when they have worked the overtime shift but do not get paid the bonus. zGigarenzer & Hug (1992) showed that when presented with perspective change situations, results are as predicted by evolutionary theory.

Gigarenzer & Hug (1992) Results.

Alternative Viewpoints. zShapiro & Epstein (1998) do not agree with domain specificity, they argue that there is a single cognitive system containing several generalised rules that can solve any number of complex problems. E.g. a screwdriver: zTightening screws requires turning them to the right. Loosening screws requires turning them to the left. Because what counts as success or error differs between the two tasks, there must be at least two different kinds of screwdrivers – one for tightening screws and one for loosening them. zSperber et al., (1995) argued that reasoning is not involved at all in the selection tasks, instead people solve them by judging the relevance of the information presented.

The Rossi/Bianchi problem zThe City Council of Padua has asked for volunteers to take care of visiting English schoolchildren. Volunteers have to fill in a card, Mr Rossi and Mrs Bianchi are about to sort the cards. Mrs Bianchi argues that only women will volunteer. Mr Rossi says she is wrong, and states that males do volunteer. Mrs Bianchi counters that if that is the case, the males will be married. zWhich cards must you turn over to see if the following is true - if a volunteer is male, then he is married FemaleMaleMarriedUnmarried Relevant version Answer = male and unmarried

Rossi/Bianchi Version 2 zIn this version, Mrs Bianchi states that men with dark hair love children and will thus volunteer. zMr Rossi says she is wrong, and asks her to prove it. zCards filled in by the volunteers show sex on one side and hair colour on the other. zWhich cards must you turn over to see if the following is true - if a volunteer is male, then he has dark hair. FemaleMaleDark hairFair hair Irrelevant version Answer = male and fair hair

Sperber et al., (1995) Results. z36 students at the University of Padua were randomly assigned to either version 1 or version 2. zBoth versions are logically and semantically similar. z65% of the students gave the correct answer to version 1. zOnly 16% gave the correct answer for version 2. zSperber and colleagues argued that the most important feature of this type of task is relevance - marital status is often relevant to looking after children, whereas hair colour is not. zNeither version involves any form of deception or cheater detection, casting doubt on Cosmides & Toobys (1992) claims of a specific cheat-detection module.

Our Data (N=241). % selecting P and not-Q 9.1%84.6% Standard Version Social Contract Version Relevant Version Irrelevant Version 31.9%25.3%

Cheng & Holyoak (1989). zThey also disagreed with evidence presented by Cosmides (1989) concerning performance on the Wason task. zThey pointed out that her versions of the task did not really deal with social exchanges or social contracts. zThey gave different versions of the Wason task - none of which involved social exchange or the identification of cheaters, and correct performance was around 95%. zThe context of the Wason task - i.e. the explanation given first, is crucial to how people perform. zThey concluded that evidence from the Wason task provides no support for the natural selection of human reasoning abilities.

Websites. zFor the remainder of the session I would like to locate some web-based resources for evolutionary psychology. zFirstly find the Primer of Evolutionary Psychology written by Tooby & Cosmides at: zhttp:// zNext have a look at the Frequently Asked Questions about evolutionary psychology at: zhttp:// tml zFinally, in the University electronic journals find the journal evolution and human behaviour and have a skim through recent editions.

References. zCheng, P.W., & Holyoak, K.J. (1989). On the natural selection of reasoning theories. Cognition, 33: zCosmides, L. (1989). The logic of social exchange: has natural selection shaped how humans reason? Studies with the Wason selection task. Cognition, 31: zCosmides, L., & Tooby, J. (1992). Cognitive adaptations for social exchange. In J.H.Barkow, L.Cosmides & J.Tooby, The Adapted Mind, chapter 3, pp zShapiro, L., & Epstein, W. (1998). Evolutionary theory meets cognitive psychology: a more selective perspective. Mind and Language, 13: zSperber, D., Cara, F., & Girotto, V. (1995). Relevance theory explains the selection task. Cognition, 57: