Illusory inferences in conditional expressions
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Springer
Materia
Illusory inferences Conditionals Mental models
Fecha
2024-04-30Referencia bibliográfica
Esspino, O.& Orenes, I.& Moreno Ríos, S. Mem Cogn (2024). [https://doi.org/10.3758/s13421-024-01571-2]
Patrocinador
Junta de Andalucía -Consejería de Universidad, Investigación e Innovación - Project (P21_00073); Spanish Government (MINECO Grant PID2021-128267NB-I00)Resumen
A robber points a gun at a cashier and says: “Only one of these two options is true: If you conceal the combination to the
safe, then I kill you; otherwise, if you don´t conceal the combination to the safe, then I kill you.” Hearing this statement, most
people conclude that, in either case, “I kill you.” This is an illusory response, in fact; the valid conclusion states “I don´t kill
you.” The research reported here studied the roles that different expressions of conditionals (“if-then,” “only if,” and “if and
only if”) play in the illusory response. Three experiments show that participants inferred the conclusion “I kill you” from
the conditional “if-then” and “I may or may not kill you” from the conditional “only if,” while selecting both options with
similar frequency for the biconditional “if and only if.” These results shed light on the main theories of deductive reasoning.