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Communalities of these approaches Schemata as high level knowledge structures

Frame . This is a remembered framework to be adapted to fit reality by changing details as necessary. is a data-structure for representing a stereotyped situation (being in a certain kind of living room, or going to a child's birthday party)

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Communalities of these approaches Schemata as high level knowledge structures

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  1. Frame. This is a remembered framework to be adapted to fit reality by changing details as necessary. • is a data-structure for representing a stereotyped situation (being in a certain kind of living room, or going to a child's birthday party) • "top levels" of a frame are fixed, and represent things that are always true about the supposed situation • lower levels have many terminals–"slots" that must be filled by specific instances or data

  2. Communalities of these approaches • Schemata as high level knowledge structures • Contain slots or variables • Slots only accept particular kinds of data • Failure to fill slots leads to them filling in default data: stereotypical values experienced in the past

  3. John kicked the ball • John • Person • Male • 6’4” • Ball • Round • White • Black spots

  4. Rapid handling of information in the world possible because of regularities in the world • We develop(ed) schemata • Cost: we err in the direction of the expected

  5. Cacciopo, Petty and Sidera (1982) had receivers for a persuasive message divided into groups of people either with a religious self-schema or a legalistic self-schema. They were asked to listen to arguments, supposedly delivered by a congressional representative, relating to either a ban on government assistance for abortions or the reinstatement of capital punishment. Half of the subjects with a religious self-schema heard a message based on religious arguments (e.g. 'There is a sacramental quality to the nature of life that demands that we show the utmost reverence for it') and half heard legalistic arguments (e.g. 'The right to life is one that is constitutionally safeguarded'). Similarly, those with a legalistic self-schema were divided into two groups and presented with religious or legalistic arguments. The results are shown in the graph on the right. • Of course, it would not be easy for a communicator outside the laboratory to separate receivers into groups according to their self-schemata. However, that is what advertisers, spin-doctors and so on are attempting to do when they find out the geographical area a person lives in, her age, sex, hobbies, income and so on.

  6. Schemata • Higher order generic cognitive structures that underlie all human knowledge and skill • Processing lies beyond direct awareness • Products are available to consciousness • Encoding an representational structure helps to structure experience and to determine what will be encoded into or retrieved from memory

  7. Systematic errors from • Fitting data into wrong schemata • Applying the correct schemata too enthusiastically, filling in defaults without checking the data • Relying too heavily upon active or salient schemata Duncker, 1926

  8. Attention to action model • Norman and Shallice (1980) • Goal: development of a theory of human action • Assumptions: • Account for correct human performance • Account for systematic human error • They are two sides of same coin • Theories of human action face the challenge that • They have to specify a control system that allows for the autonomy of well established motor programs • And that most actions actually go according to plan

  9. Norman & Shallice (1986) • Two structures • Horizontal threads • Vertical threads

  10. Horizontal threads • Self sufficient strand of specialized processing structures (schemas) • Govern habitual activities without the need of attentional control • Receive triggering condition from environmental input or previously active schemas

  11. Vertical threads • Interact with horizontal threads • Provide means by which attentional or motivational factors can modulate schema activation values • Higher level attentional processes especially in novel situations Supervisory attentional system

  12. Automatic • Task can be executed without awareness • Task can be initiated without deliberation • Attention can be drawn automatically to something • Tasks that can be performed with no interference to each other • Task that require deliberate attention • Planning / deciding • Troubleshooting • Ill-learned or novel situations • Dangerous situations • Overcoming a habit

  13. Judgment and Decision making

  14. Decline of normative theories • Until early 1970s research into judgment and decision making had a strong rationalist bias • Mental processes could be understood in terms of normative theories describing optimal strategies • Errors were attributed to either irrationality or to unawareness on the part of the perceiver • Humans were assumed to make decisions according to Subjective Expected Utility Theory (SEU)

  15. PASCAL’S wager: SEU "If you believe, and God exists, you gain everything. If you disbelieve, and God exists, you lose everything." Alternatively : "It makes more sense to believe in God than to not believe. If you believe, and God exists, you will be rewarded in the afterlife. If you do not believe, and He exists, you will be punished for your disbelief. If He does not exist, and you believe it will be a nuisance and if HE does not exist and you do not believe in Him you will enjoy the worldly pleasures" Value of choice alternative = p01 X U01 + p02X U02 + ……

  16. SEU • Assumptions about the decision maker • DM has a clearly defined utility function allowing to quantify preferences for a range of outcomes • DM posses a clear and exhaustive view of possible alternative strategies • DM can create a consistent joint probability distribution of scenarios • DM chooses between alternatives in such way that they maximize the subjective expected utility • Problem: unrealistic assumptions

  17. The very limited view on the problem space

  18. Human decision making is constrained by the very limited view on the problem space • In response to this, Simon (1975) created the concept of bounded rationality • Human mind as very limited capacity to formulate and solve complex problems • Result is satisficing behavior: settle for satisficing rather than optimal choices, actions • Example: house purchase

  19. Imperfect rationality • How do people draw conclusions from evidence (Wason & Johnson-Laird, 1972)

  20. Teenagers who don’t have their own cars usually end up borrowing their parents’ cars. In return for the privilege of borrowing the car, the Goldstein’s have given their kids the rule,“If you borrow my car, then you have to fill up the tank with gas.” • Of course, teenagers are sometimes careless and irresponsible. You are interested in seeing whether any of the Goldstein teenagers broke this rule. • These cards represent four of the Goldstein teenagers. Each card represents one teenager. One side of the card tells whether or not a teenager has borrowed the parents’ car on a particular day, and the other side tells whether or not that teenager filled up the tank with gas on that day.Which of the following cards would you definitely need to turn over to see if any of these teenagers are breaking their parents’ rule: • If you borrow my car, then you have to fill up the tank with gas.” • Don’t turn over any more cards than are absolutely necessary. 76% correct borrowed car did not borrow car  filled up tank with gas  did not fill up tank with gas

  21. If p then q • P and non-q should be examined because they are potentially falsifying • Non-p and q can be ignored because the truth of the hypothesis will not be effected no matter what is on their other side • Johnson-Laird & Wason (1970) • Pq 59 • P 42 • P,q,non-q 9 • P, non-q 5

  22. Imperfect rationality • People are focusing on affirmative statements • People are trying to verify generalizations rather than falsify them

  23. True or wrong ?

  24. The is above the +

  25. The is not above the +

  26. The + is above the

  27. The + is not above the

  28. Picture sentence verification task

  29. Linguistic factors • Negatives take longer to be verified • Verification of statement as true/false influences verification time (congruence) • Positive statement: true faster than false • Negative statements: false verified faster than true • Constituent comparisons of constant duration • congruence between picture and sentence (congruence faster) • Negatives add time • True negative longest because incongruent and negative

  30. Judgmental heuristics and biases • Tversky and Kahneman (1974)

  31. Representativeness • Diagnose situation by extent to which cues match the set that is representative of hypothesis Troubleshooter observes set of cues Matches those to patterns from past experience After matching a diagnosis is reached • Problem when Cues are ambiguous without considering the base rate, probability Physician: Anthrax vs. Flu

  32. Availability • “Ease with which instances …can be brought to mind” • A mean to approximate prior probabilities • People entertain more available hypotheses • Influences on availability • Recency • Simplicity of hypothesis • Elaboration

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