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How do people search evidence for a hypothesis? A well documented
answer in cognitive psychology is that they search for confirming
evidence. However, the rational strategy is to try to falsify the
hypothesis. This book critically evaluates this contradiction.
Experimental research is discussed against the background of
philosophical and formal theories of hypothesis testing with
striking results: Falsificationism and verificationism - the two
main rival philosophies of testing - come down to one and the same
principle for concrete testing behaviour, eluding the contrast
between rational falsification and confirmation bias. In this book,
the author proposes a new perspective for describing hypothesis
testing behaviour - the probability-value model - which unifies the
contrasting views. According to this model, hypothesis testers
pragmatically consider what evidence and how much evidence will
convince them to reject or accept the hypothesis. They might either
require highly probative evidence for its acceptance, at the risk
of its rejection, or protect it against rejection and go for minor
confirming observations. Interestingly, the model refines the
classical opposition between rationality and pragmaticity because
pragmatic considerations are a legitimate aspect of 'rational'
hypothesis testing. Possible future research and applications of
the ideas advanced are discussed, such as the modelling of expert
hypothesis testing.
How do people search evidence for a hypothesis? A well documented answer in cognitive psychology is that they search for confirming evidence. However, the rational strategy is to try to falsify the hypothesis. This book critically evaluates this contradiction. Experimental research is discussed against the background of philosophical and formal theories of hypothesis testing with striking results: Falsificationism and verificationism - the two main rival philosophies of testing - come down to one and the same principle for concrete testing behaviour, eluding the contrast between rational falsification and confirmation bias. In this book, the author proposes a new perspective for describing hypothesis testing behaviour - the probability-value model - which unifies the contrasting views. According to this model, hypothesis testers pragmatically consider what evidence and how much evidence will convince them to reject or accept the hypothesis. They might either require highly probative evidence for its acceptance, at the risk of its rejection, or protect it against rejection and go for minor confirming observations. Interestingly, the model refines the classical opposition between rationality and pragmaticity because pragmatic considerations are a legitimate aspect of 'rational' hypothesis testing. Possible future research and applications of the ideas advanced are discussed, such as the modelling of expert hypothesis testing.
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