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Peter Cathcart Wason

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236: 344:, also known as the 4-card task, in 1966. In this task, participants were exposed to four cards on a table, and given a rule by the experimenter. The participants were then told to choose just cards to determine whether the rule given to them by the experimenter was true or false. As Wason expected, a majority of participants failed to answer the question correctly. Only ten percent of participants solved this task correctly. The confirmation bias played a large part in this result, as participants usually chose cards to confirm their hypothesis, instead of eliminating it. 362:, to further his studies in psychology of reasoning. Participants were shown cards with a white diamond, a black diamond, a white circle, and a black circle. They were then given a rule, and instructed to choose which of the cards would be a THOG, which were not, and which could not be classified. The THOG task required subjects to carry out a combinational analysis, a feat an adult should be able to accomplish, using reason and logic. However, half of the participants failed to solve the problem correctly. 301:
the statement is true or false. The results revealed that affirmative assertions were evaluated faster as true rather than false, but evaluation of negative assertions occurred faster as false rather than true. From these results, Wason came to the conclusion that negatives are used in daily discourse to correct common misconceptions. An example of this usage would be "The chair is not here". Wason continued to explore and experiment in the field of psycholinguistics. With
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of threes. The "2-4-6" rule the experimenter had in mind was "any ascending sequence". In most cases, subjects not only formed hypotheses that were more specific than necessary, but they also only tested positive examples of their hypothesis. Wason was surprised by the large number of subjects who failed to get the task correct. The subjects failed to test instances inconsistent with their own hypothesis, which further supported Wason's hypothesis of confirmation bias.
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In 1960 Wason developed the first of many tasks he would devise to reveal the failures of human reasoning. The "2-4-6" task was the first experiment that showed people to be illogical and irrational. In this study, subjects were told that the experimenter had a rule in mind that only applied to sets
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Peter Wason took a rather unconventional approach to his studies. When running experiments, he took a more active approach. Although he had some assistants, he insisted on being present when experiments were run, so he could actively watch the behaviour of the subjects throughout the process. It is
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Much of Peter Wason's first areas of experimentation was not in the field of psychology of reasoning, but language and psycholinguistics. Wason and Jones performed an experiment in which subjects were asked to evaluate numerical statements, such as "7 is even" and "9 is not odd", and state whether
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at the Harvard Center for Cognitive Studies, Wason found that context affects comprehension of an utterance, measured in time taken to respond. Participants were likely to respond more quickly to the statement "Circle number 4 is not blue" in a context in which all of the other circles were red.
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atmosphere into his study by asking his subjects how they felt about the experiment itself, as well as the results delivered. These evaluations were recorded and placed in his papers, giving them a more personal and unique aspect than many other academic papers of the time. Wason's goal was to
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Before the creation of psychology of reasoning, it was a commonly held belief that humans reasoned by logical analysis. Wason argued against this logicism, saying that humans are unable to reason, and quite frequently fall prey to
319:. Wason thought many of the things in his life were inconsistent and therefore unreasonable. When he designed his experiments, Wason's goal was to examine the illogical nature of humans. Wason also wanted to look further into the 276:, by then an independent brigade. Wason returned home in 1945, having been released from his duties as an officer due to extreme injuries. Wason then studied English at Oxford in 1948, and became a lecturer at the 271:
Peter Wason endured his schooling, which was marked by consistent failure. With the beginning of World War II, Wason completed officer training at Sandhurst, and then served as a liaison officer for the
264:, and the son of Eugene Monier and Kathleen (Woodhouse) Wason. Wason married Marjorie Vera Salberg in 1951, and the couple had two children, Armorer and Sarah. His uncle was Lieutenant General 791: 232:" to describe the tendency for people to immediately favor information that validates their preconceptions, hypotheses and personal beliefs regardless of whether they are true or not. 741: 806: 771: 746: 756: 781: 751: 736: 224:. He sought to explain why people consistently commit logical errors. He designed problems and tests to demonstrate these behaviours, such as the 801: 761: 273: 796: 642: 493: 776: 786: 766: 235: 217: 176: 124: 459: 376:
discover new psychological phenomena and new aspects of human behaviour, and not only to test his own hypotheses.
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Chater, N; Oaksford, M (2001). "Human rationality and the psychology of reasoning: Where do we go from here?".
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to obtain a master's degree in psychology in 1953, and then a doctorate in 1956 from
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Wason, Peter (1960). "On The Failure to Eliminate Hypotheses in a Conceptual Task".
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Wason, Peter; Carey, Susan (February 1965). "The contexts of plausible denial".
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Wason, Peter; Jones, Sheila (1963). "Negatives: Denotation and Connotation".
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Perspectives on Thinking and Reasoning: Essays in Honor of Peter Wason
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Gale Literature: Contemporary Authors: Gale In Context: Biography
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Wason came to the conclusion context affects comprehension.
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Newstead, Stephen; Evans, Jonathan St. B.T. (1 July 1995).
624: 622: 280:. Disenchanted with teaching English, Wason returned to 260:, on 17 April 2003. Peter Wason was the grandson of 182: 168: 158: 140: 130: 116: 106: 96: 86: 63: 41: 34: 792:Graduates of the Royal Military College, Sandhurst 630: 637:. Sussex, UK: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates Ltd. 581:Newstead, S (2003). "Peter Wason (1924-2003)". 212:(22 April 1924 – 17 April 2003) was an English 556:Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior 395:Psychology of Reasoning: Structure and Content 8: 660:Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 310:The Beginning of the Psychology of Reasoning 358:Wason devised yet another task, called the 453: 451: 449: 403:, (co-edited with P N Johnson-Laird, 1977) 391:, (co-edited with P N Johnson-Laird, 1968) 256:, on 22 April 1924, and died at age 79 in 31: 594: 292:until his retirement in the early 1980s. 742:Academics of the University of Aberdeen 419: 401:Thinking: Readings in Cognitive Science 807:Military personnel from Bath, Somerset 772:British Army personnel of World War II 747:Academics of University College London 488: 486: 484: 482: 480: 7: 757:Alumni of University College London 782:English people of Scottish descent 752:Alumni of the University of Oxford 737:20th-century British psychologists 533:10.1111/j.2044-8295.1963.tb00885.x 25: 384:Wason wrote the following books: 239:Grave of Peter Cathcart Wason in 409:, (with William Hartston, 1983). 397:, (with P N Johnson-Laird, 1972) 27:English psychologist (1924–2003) 371:also said that Wason infused a 458:The Guardian (25 April 2003). 1: 802:Royal Armoured Corps officers 695:British Journal of Psychology 568:10.1016/s0022-5371(65)80060-3 521:British Journal of Psychology 762:Burials at Highgate Cemetery 366:Approach to experimentation 823: 797:People from Bath, Somerset 351: 288:. He remained teaching at 218:University College, London 177:University College, London 125:University College, London 672:10.1080/17470216008416717 605:10.1080/13546780244000141 290:University College London 286:University College London 203: 151: 327:Wason and the 2-4-6 Task 258:Wallingford, Oxfordshire 777:Cognitive psychologists 707:10.1348/000712601162031 494:"Wason, Peter Cathcart" 407:The Psychology of Chess 222:psychology of reasoning 195:Jonathan St B. T. Evans 135:Psychology of reasoning 583:Thinking and Reasoning 389:Thinking and Reasoning 278:University of Aberdeen 244: 214:cognitive psychologist 173:University of Aberdeen 787:English psychologists 767:British Army officers 238: 274:8th Armoured Brigade 226:Wason selection task 220:, who pioneered the 210:Peter Cathcart Wason 190:Philip Johnson-Laird 373:clinical psychology 340:Wason created the 336:The Four-Card Task 266:Sydney Rigby Wason 252:Wason was born in 245: 145:Sydney Rigby Wason 321:confirmation bias 282:Oxford University 241:Highgate Cemetery 230:confirmation bias 207: 206: 183:Doctoral students 153:Scientific career 91:Highgate Cemetery 16:(Redirected from 814: 711: 710: 690: 684: 683: 655: 649: 648: 636: 626: 617: 616: 598: 578: 572: 571: 551: 545: 544: 516: 510: 509: 507: 505: 490: 475: 474: 472: 470: 455: 444: 443: 441: 439: 424: 70: 51: 49: 32: 21: 822: 821: 817: 816: 815: 813: 812: 811: 717: 716: 715: 714: 692: 691: 687: 657: 656: 652: 645: 628: 627: 620: 580: 579: 575: 553: 552: 548: 518: 517: 513: 503: 501: 492: 491: 478: 468: 466: 457: 456: 447: 437: 435: 427:The Telegraph. 426: 425: 421: 416: 382: 368: 356: 350: 338: 329: 312: 298: 250: 199: 117:Alma mater 82: 72: 68: 59: 53: 47: 45: 37: 28: 23: 22: 15: 12: 11: 5: 820: 818: 810: 809: 804: 799: 794: 789: 784: 779: 774: 769: 764: 759: 754: 749: 744: 739: 734: 729: 719: 718: 713: 712: 685: 666:(3): 129–140. 650: 644:978-0863773587 643: 618: 596:10.1.1.377.616 589:(3): 177–184. 573: 546: 527:(4): 299–307. 511: 476: 445: 418: 417: 415: 412: 411: 410: 404: 398: 392: 381: 378: 367: 364: 352:Main article: 349: 346: 342:Selection Task 337: 334: 328: 325: 311: 308: 297: 294: 254:Bath, Somerset 249: 246: 205: 204: 201: 200: 198: 197: 192: 186: 184: 180: 179: 170: 166: 165: 160: 156: 155: 149: 148: 142: 138: 137: 132: 131:Known for 128: 127: 118: 114: 113: 108: 104: 103: 98: 94: 93: 88: 84: 83: 73: 71:(aged 78) 65: 61: 60: 56:Bath, Somerset 54: 43: 39: 38: 35: 26: 24: 14: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 819: 808: 805: 803: 800: 798: 795: 793: 790: 788: 785: 783: 780: 778: 775: 773: 770: 768: 765: 763: 760: 758: 755: 753: 750: 748: 745: 743: 740: 738: 735: 733: 730: 728: 725: 724: 722: 708: 704: 700: 696: 689: 686: 681: 677: 673: 669: 665: 661: 654: 651: 646: 640: 635: 634: 625: 623: 619: 614: 610: 606: 602: 597: 592: 588: 584: 577: 574: 569: 565: 561: 557: 550: 547: 542: 538: 534: 530: 526: 522: 515: 512: 499: 495: 489: 487: 485: 483: 481: 477: 465: 461: 460:"Peter Wason" 454: 452: 450: 446: 434: 433:The Telegraph 430: 429:"Peter Wason" 423: 420: 413: 408: 405: 402: 399: 396: 393: 390: 387: 386: 385: 379: 377: 374: 365: 363: 361: 355: 347: 345: 343: 335: 333: 326: 324: 322: 318: 309: 307: 304: 296:Early studies 295: 293: 291: 287: 283: 279: 275: 269: 267: 263: 259: 255: 248:Personal life 247: 242: 237: 233: 231: 227: 223: 219: 215: 211: 202: 196: 193: 191: 188: 187: 185: 181: 178: 174: 171: 167: 164: 161: 157: 154: 150: 146: 143: 139: 136: 133: 129: 126: 122: 119: 115: 112: 109: 105: 102: 99: 95: 92: 89: 87:Resting place 85: 80: 76: 67:17 April 2003 66: 62: 57: 52:22 April 1924 44: 40: 33: 30: 19: 698: 694: 688: 663: 659: 653: 632: 586: 582: 576: 559: 555: 549: 524: 520: 514: 502:. Retrieved 500:. Gale. 2003 497: 467:. Retrieved 464:The Guardian 463: 436:. Retrieved 432: 422: 406: 400: 394: 388: 383: 380:Publications 369: 357: 354:THOG problem 339: 330: 313: 299: 270: 262:Eugene Wason 251: 209: 208: 169:Institutions 152: 69:(2003-04-17) 29: 732:2003 deaths 727:1924 births 701:: 193–216. 562:(1): 7–11. 469:24 November 438:24 November 303:Susan Carey 243:(east side) 107:Citizenship 97:Nationality 79:Oxfordshire 75:Wallingford 36:Peter Wason 18:Peter Wason 721:Categories 504:8 November 414:References 163:Psychology 48:1924-04-22 613:144447692 591:CiteSeerX 360:THOG task 348:THOG Task 141:Relatives 81:, England 58:, England 680:19237642 541:14079021 147:(uncle) 111:British 101:English 678:  641:  611:  593:  539:  317:biases 159:Fields 121:Oxford 676:S2CID 609:S2CID 639:ISBN 537:PMID 506:2022 471:2014 440:2014 64:Died 42:Born 703:doi 668:doi 601:doi 564:doi 529:doi 216:at 723:: 699:92 697:. 674:. 664:12 662:. 621:^ 607:. 599:. 585:. 558:. 535:. 525:54 523:. 496:. 479:^ 462:. 448:^ 431:. 268:. 175:, 123:, 77:, 709:. 705:: 682:. 670:: 647:. 615:. 603:: 587:9 570:. 566:: 560:4 543:. 531:: 508:. 473:. 442:. 50:) 46:( 20:)

Index

Peter Wason
Bath, Somerset
Wallingford
Oxfordshire
Highgate Cemetery
English
British
Oxford
University College, London
Psychology of reasoning
Sydney Rigby Wason
Psychology
University of Aberdeen
University College, London
Philip Johnson-Laird
Jonathan St B. T. Evans
cognitive psychologist
University College, London
psychology of reasoning
Wason selection task
confirmation bias

Highgate Cemetery
Bath, Somerset
Wallingford, Oxfordshire
Eugene Wason
Sydney Rigby Wason
8th Armoured Brigade
University of Aberdeen
Oxford University

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