Title: Suppressing valid inferences with conditionals
1Suppressing valid inferences with conditionals
- Ruth M.J. Byrne, MRC Applied Psychology Unit,
Cambridge - (1987, 1988, 1989)
2Four Conditional Inferences
- Modus Ponens (MP)
- Modus Tollens (MT)
- Denial of the Antecedent (DA)
- Affirmation of the Consequent (AC)
3Modus Ponens
- Premise 1 (conditional)
- If P then Q
- Premise 2 (categorical sentence)
- P
- Valid conclusion
- Q
4Modus Tollens
- Premise 1 (conditional)
- If P then Q
- Premise 2 (categorical sentence)
- Q
- Valid conclusion
- P
5Correct inferences
- MP is generally self-evident for validity and the
conclusion is deduced easily. - Some tricky cases (20 in pocket, warnings)
- MT is more difficult to infer, but generally
judged to be valid.
6Denial of the Antecedent
- Premise 1 (conditional)
- If P then Q
- Premise 2 (categorical sentence)
- P
- Invalid conclusion
- Q
7Affirmation of the Consequent
- Premise 1 (conditional)
- If P then Q
- Premise 2 (categorical sentence)
- Q
- Invalid conclusion
- P
8Incorrect inferences (fallacies)
- DA and AC are the most common errors among test
groups. - If she has an essay to write then she will study
late in the library. - She does not have an essay to write, so
- She will not study in the library. Nothing
follows. - She will study late in the library, so
- She has an essay to write. Nothing follows.
9Formal theories
- Fallacies are difficult for formal (rule-based)
theories to explain. - They are usually attributed to comprehension
processes by which the premises are decoded into
incorrect representations used by the rules (e.g.
obverse of conditional).
10Suppressing invalid inferences
- When accompanied by alternative antecedents,
people systematically reject invalid DA and AC
conclusions. - (Markovits, 1985 Rumain et al., 1983)
11Example (suppressing invalid inferences)
- If she has an essay to write then she will study
late in the library. - If she has some textbooks to read then she will
study late in the library. - She does not have an essay to write, so
- Nothing follows what if she has some textbooks
to read? - She will study late in the library, so
- Nothing follows maybe she has an essay to
write, maybe she has some textbooks to read, or
maybe something else.
12What if
- The opposite is true, and we can suppress valid
inferences.
13Example (suppressing valid inferences)
- If she has an essay to write then she will study
late in the library. - If the library stays open then she will study
late in the library. - She has an essay to write, so
- Nothing follows what if the library doesnt
stay open? She will study late in the library. - She will not study late in the library, so
- Nothing follows what if the library doesnt
stay open? She doesnt have an essay to write.
14Suppressing valid inferences
- Hypothesis 1 when accompanied by additional
antecedents, people will systematically reject
valid MP and MT inferences.
15Experiment 1 setup
- 24 subjects, 3 groups (no logic tuition)
- 3 argument types
- Simple conditional, conditional alternative,
conditional additional - 4 inference types
- MP, MT, DA, AC
- Given 3 conclusions which one follows?
16Experiment 1 results
17Experiment 1 summary
- Additional antecedents suppressed MP and MT
inferences, while, as proven before, alternative
antecedents suppressed DA and AC inferences. - Alternative or additional antecedents in the
second conditional must alter the interpretation
of the first conditional.
18But why?
- Perhaps the relevant formal rule no longer
applies to the interpretation. - More plausible suppression depends on the
categorical information supplied in the premises.
19What if
- We supply more categorical information.
20Example (not suppressing valid inferences)
- If she meets her friend then she will go to a
play. - If she has enough money then she will go to a
play. - She meets her friend and she has enough money,
so - She will go to a play.
- She will not go to a play, so
- She doesnt meet her friend.
21Example (not suppressing invalid inferences)
- If she meets her friend then she will go to a
play. - If she meets her family then she will go to a
play. - She does not meet her friend and she does not
meet her family, so - She will not go to a play. Nothing follows
what if some other reason compelled her to go? - She will go to a play, so
- She meets her friend. Nothing follows what if
some other reason compelled her to go?
22Not suppressing valid inferences
- Hypothesis 2 when accompanied by additional
antecedents together with the conjunction of both
antecedents, people will systematically affirm
valid MP and MT inferences (and invalid DA and AC
inferences), as in the simple argument.
23Experiment 2 setup
- 24 subjects, 3 groups (no logic tuition)
- 3 argument types
- Simple conditional, conditional alternative
conjunction/consequent, conditional additional
conjunction/consequent - 4 inference types
- MP, MT, DA, AC
- Given 3 conclusions which one follows?
24Experiment 2 results
25Experiment 2 summary
- Combined additional antecedents didnt suppress
MP or MT inferences, and combined alternative
antecedents didnt suppress DA or AC inferences. - Presumably, the conditionals were interpreted
correctly, but nonetheless both fallacies and
correct inferences were made in the presence of
categorical information.
26What if
- Specific alternatives or additionals are
suggested simply by general subject knowledge?
27Example (no duration)
- During the student protest, the policeman said to
the student If you enter the building then I
will arrest you. - The student entered the building, so
- The policeman arrested the student.
- (Note this inference is not strictly valid as it
is embedded within a description.)
28Example (short duration)
- During the 15-minute student protest, the
policeman said to the student If you enter the
building then I will arrest you. - The student entered the building, so
- Nothing follows what if the protest was no
longer in progress when the student entered the
building? The policeman arrested the student.
29Example (long duration)
- During the 2-week student protest, the policeman
said to the student If you enter the building
then I will arrest you. - The student did not enter the building, so
- Nothing follows what if other actions caused
the student to be arrested?
30Suppressing valid inferences
- Hypothesis 3 when accompanied by assertions of
short-duration, the plausibility of additional
antecedents will be suggested, and people will
systematically reject valid MP and MT inferences
when accompanied by assertions of long-duration,
the plausibility of alternative antecedents will
be suggested, and people will reject invalid DA
and AC inferences.
31Experiment 3 setup
- 24 subjects, 3 groups (no logic tuition)
- 3 argument types
- Simple conditional (no duration), conditional
alternatives (long-duration), conditional
additionals (short-duration) - 4 inference types
- MP, MT, DA, AC
- Is the conclusion true? (Yes/No/Maybe/Cant Say)
32Experiment 3 results
33Experiment 3 summary
- Additional (short-duration) arguments suppressed
MP and MT inferences, while alternative
(long-duration) antecedents suppressed DA, but
not AC, inferences. - Perhaps the inconsistency is due to the
considerable amount of contextual information
already given in the descriptions.
34Labs vs. conversations
- In labs, it is common for subjects to assume they
are being given all the information they need. - In conversations, this is not always the case, so
alternative options are often supposed.
35What does this tell us?
- Context can suppress both valid and invalid
inferences. - For formal theories, if suppression of an invalid
inference implies no corresponding rule, then
suppression of a valid inference should imply the
same. Yet this is not the case. - Suppression alone tells us nothing about the
existence of the mental rules of inference
proposed by formal theorists.
36Interpretation in formal theories
- Let us consider that the problem lies in
interpretation. - For alternative antecedents
- If P then Q (P ? Q)
- If R then Q (R ? Q)
- If P or R then Q (P v R ? Q)
- For additional antecedents
- If P then Q (P ? Q)
- If R then Q (R ? Q)
- If P and R then Q (P R ? Q)
37Semantics in formal theories
- P v R ? Q
- Blocks both DA and AC inferences
- P R ? Q
- Blocks both MP and MT inferences
- Semantic content plays a key role in developing
an interpretation of these representations. - Formal rules need additional information on
comprehension, how premises with the same logical
form are represented in different ways.
38Other explanations
- People rely on content-specific/domain-dependent
rules instead of uninterpreted abstract rules. - How do people reason in unfamiliar areas?
- People use a general semantic procedure. (i.e.
mental models)
39Mental models
- Construct a model of a state of affairs.
- Attempt to formulate a conclusion.
- Search for alternative models that refute the
conclusion. - (Johnson-Laird, 1983)
40Simple example
- If P then Q
- P Q
- P Q
- o Q
- Wherever P exists, Q also exists, so given P, Q
follows (MP). MT requires additional information
to be added to the model.
41Extended example
- Adding a second conditional (if R then Q) depends
on the meaning and general knowledge of how to
integrate it in. - For additionals
- P R Q
- P R Q
- o Q
- An assertion of P will no longer suffice to
conclude Q.
42Extended example
- For alternatives
- P Q
- P Q
- R Q
- R Q
- o Q
- An assertion of P will now suffice to conclude Q,
but the fallacies will be suppressed.
43The point
- Interpretation (and therefore context) plays a
critical role in the interaction among statements
of the same logical form. - Theories based on mental models seem to better
account for this process.
44The end