AIQUANT-PHSep 25, 2016

Testing Quantum Models of Conjunction Fallacy on the World Wide Web

arXiv:1609.07721v216 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This research addresses a debate in cognitive science about the underlying mechanisms of the conjunction fallacy, providing empirical evidence that could refine theoretical models.

The study tested two quantum models of the conjunction fallacy by using the World Wide Web as an information space, finding that 'emergence effects' are the primary cognitive mechanism behind the observed fallacies, not 'order effects'.

The 'conjunction fallacy' has been extensively debated by scholars in cognitive science and, in recent times, the discussion has been enriched by the proposal of modeling the fallacy using the quantum formalism. Two major quantum approaches have been put forward: the first assumes that respondents use a two-step sequential reasoning and that the fallacy results from the presence of 'question order effects'; the second assumes that respondents evaluate the cognitive situation as a whole and that the fallacy results from the 'emergence of new meanings', as an 'effect of overextension' in the conceptual conjunction. Thus, the question arises as to determine whether and to what extent conjunction fallacies would result from 'order effects' or, instead, from 'emergence effects'. To help clarify this situation, we propose to use the World Wide Web as an 'information space' that can be interrogated both in a sequential and non-sequential way, to test these two quantum approaches. We find that 'emergence effects', and not 'order effects', should be considered the main cognitive mechanism producing the observed conjunction fallacies.

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