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Mental Models in Cognitive Science

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P. N. Johnson-Laird Univ. of Sussex Cognitive Science 4, pp.71-115., 1980 Introduction Inference and Mental Models Meaning and Mental Models Images ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Mental Models in Cognitive Science


1
Mental Models in Cognitive Science
  • P. N. Johnson-Laird
  • Univ. of Sussex
  • Cognitive Science 4, pp.71-115., 1980
  • ???

2
Contents
13-1
  • Introduction
  • Inference and Mental Models
  • Meaning and Mental Models
  • Images, Propositions, and Mental Models
  • Levels of Desciption
  • Experiments on Mental Models and Propositional
    Representations
  • Conclusions

3
Introduction
13-2
  • Cognitive science needs theories that both cohere
    and correspond to the facts.
  • Three questions
  • The mental processes that underlie ordinary
    reasoning and the question of what rules of
    inference they embody
  • the representation of the meanings of words and
    the question of whether they depend on a
    decompositional dictionary or a set of meaning
    postulates
  • the form of mental representations and the
    questions of whether images differ from sets of
    propositions
  • ? Their answers all implicate the notion of a
    mental model

4
Inference and Mental Models
13-3
  • Syllogism Aristotle
  • All A are B, All B are C, then All A are C
  • Figure effect
  • Atmosphere effect
  • negative ? negative or affirmative, particular
    ? particular or universial
  • Three theories in the last few years
  • Ericson Euler circles
  • All A are B ? All B are A ,
  • Some A are not B ? Some B are not A
  • a1 ? B b1 ? A
  • a2 ? B b2 ? -A

5
Inference and Mental Models
13-4
  • Criteria for evaluating theories of syllogistic
    inference
  • account for the systematic mistakes and many
    valid inferences
  • should be readily extendable
  • provide an account of how children acquire the
    ability to make inferences
  • should be at least compatible with the
    development of formal logic
  • ? three theories fare pooly on these criteria ? a
    different approach needed
  • Syllogistic inference as the manipulation of
    mental models
  • An evaluation of the mental model theory of
    inference
  • it provides an account of both the figural effect
    and the systematic errors
  • can be generated so as to represent all sorts of
    quantified assertions
  • illuminates the way in which children learn to
    make inferences
  • entirely compatible with the development of
    formal logic

6
Meaning and Mental Models
13-5
  • Meaning postulate
  • stipulates the semantic relations between words
  • the notion that lexical items (words) can be
    defined in terms of relations with other lexical
    items
  • Propositional representation
  • we store concepts in a non-language form of
    propositions.
  • we can bring the concept into our working memory
    to put it into language.
  • Two problems for meaning postulates
  • Procedures for manipulating mental models
  • FUNCT(0, 1)
  • DX, DY

Luke
B A
Mark
Matt.
7
Images, Propositions, and Mental Models
13-6
  • Propositional representations
  • People store concepts in a non-language form of
    proposition.
  • A proposition is a complete statement. It can be
    true or false.
  • a dog -gt object, That dog looks like my dog -gt
    proposition
  • The boy was having a birthday party, and the
    girl had no present to give him.
  • P1 ( HAVE boy birthday party )
  • P2 ( POSESS girl present )
  • P3 ( NEGATIVE P2)
  • P4 ( GIVE girl present boy)
  • Image
  • A mental image is an experience that resembles
    the experience of perceiving some object, event,
    or scene when the relevant object, event, or
    scene is not actually present to the senses.
  • Owing to the fundamentally subjective nature of
    the phenomenon, there is little evidence either
    for or against this view.

8
Images, Propositions, and Mental Models
13-7
  • Images versus Propositional representations
  • An image is distinct from a mere representation
    of propositions
  • Mental processes for images are similar to the
    perception of an object or a picture
  • a coherent and integrated representation
  • amenable to mental transformations
  • Represent objects
  • An image is epiphenomenal and propositional in
    form
  • Mental processes for P.R. are similar to the
    perception of an object or a picture
  • When propositions are represented in the form of
    a semantic network, then the representation is
    coherent and integrated.
  • A P.R. is discrete and digital rather than
    continuous, but can represent continuous.
  • Propositons are true or false of objects.
  • The critics of imagery
  • An image does not introduce any new
    information, it merely makes the stored
    desciption more accesible and easier to
    manipulate.
  • Image and P.R. differ on the function served by
    representation ( 4th characteristics)
  • but share many properties
  • They are similar and transformed into one another
  • gt controversy is neither fundamental nor
    resolvable.

9
Images, Propositions, and Mental Models
13-8
  • Andersons theorem on Mimicry
  • A propositional theory can mimic an imagery
    theory.
  • Imaginal theory A stimulus is encoded as an
    image.
  • Propositional theory A stimulus is encoded
    as a set of proposition.
  • propositions ? propositional encoding
    inversely ? original stimulus ? imaginal encoding
    ? image ? rotate image ? rotated image ? imaginal
    encoding inversely
  • ? (rotated) stimulus ? propositional encoding
    ? the set of propositions(rotated)
  • the set of propositions(rotated) ?
    propositional encoding inversely ? rotated image
  • (rotated) stimulus ? imaginal encoding ?
    rotated image
  • gt There is no guarantee that a direct method can
    always be found for two theories.
  • ( indeterminate state -gt a single P.R. ,
    many different M.M. )
  • gt A theory of P.R. does not yield the same
    equivalence class of representations as the
    class yielded by the theory of mental models.
    There is difference between them.

10
Images, Propositions, and Mental Models
13-9
  • The characteristics of propositional
    representations
  • A proposition can be treated as a function from
    the set of possible worlds onto the set of truth
    values.
  • Grasping a proposition is analogous to compling a
    function, whereas verifying a proposition is
    analogous to evaluating a function.
  • Arbitrary syntactic structure K(a,ß) , (aKß) ,
    or (a,ß)K
  • The propositional description of a complicated
    state of affairs may consist of a large number of
    propositions.
  • gt In a semantic network, propositions about
    the same entity are gathered together.

11
Images, Propositions, and Mental Models
13-10
  • The charateristics of mental models
  • Propositional representation is a desciption.
    (true or false w.r.t. the world)
  • Human being do not apprehend the world directly
    but possess internal representations of it.
  • P. R. is true or false with respect to a mental
    model of the world.
  • ( This functional difference could be only
    distinction between P.R. and M.M.)
  • A model represents a state of affairs in the
    world. Its structure is not arbitrary.
  • A single P.R. will suffice, but many alternative
    models will be needed for the discourse.
  • Images correspond to the components of models
    that are directly perceptible in the equivalent
    real-world objects.
  • Model may underlie thought processes without
    necessarily emerging into concious-ness in the
    form of images.
  • Images and models are not necessarily equivalent
    to sets of propositions?

12
Level of Description
13-11
  • The reconstruction of a theory at a lower level
    of description
  • - A psychological description should be a
    functional one.
  • - Whole of the original theory of spatial
    inference can be reconstructed in way of program
    formulae. ( A is on the right of B -gt AT(A,1,6),
    AT(B,1,2) )
  • Any psychological theory can be based (vacuously)
    on propositional representations
  • - Any plausible theory of any psychological
    phenomenon is propositional.
  • How to give the notion of a Propositional
    representations an emperical content
  • - A propositional representation is based on
    symbols that correspond in a one-to-
  • one fashion with the lexical items of
    natuaral language.
  • - The same advantage in programming language
    is obtained from high level
  • procedures for manipulating both models
    and propositional representations.

13
Experiments on M.M. P. R.
13-12
  • Hypothesis
  • There appear to be different levels of
    representation (differ in kind)
  • superficial understanding propositional
    representation
  • profound understanding mental model
  • Experiments
  • continuous vs discontinuous continuous were
    better recalled
  • Determinate vs indeterminate
  • determinate premises were better recalled
  • If subject remembers the original meaning, they
    can remember it verbatim.
  • Assumtional results
  • Mental models are constructed from propositional
    representations.
  • Amount of processing mental model gt P.R.
  • P.R. not easy to recall, but if recalled, it
    can be recalled verbatim
  • M.M. easy to recall, but no guarantee to be
    recalled verbatim

69 correct 42 correct
60 correct
14
Conclusions
13-13
  • First, there are indeed distictions to be drawn
    between P.R. and M.M..
  • Second, there are likewise distinctions to be
    drawn between a decompositional semantics and a
    set of meaning postultes.
  • Third, it is possible to account for the
    psychological principles underlying deductive
    reasoning.
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