Thinking 7
Thinking 7
Thinking 7
Thinking and
Language
PowerPoint®
Presentation
by Jim Foley
Create a
Algorithms methodical path to
make sure you
check every single
aisle.
1. C L O O Y S P H Y G
2. C O L O Y S P H Y G
3. C O O L Y S P H Y G…
To solve a word jumble,
you can try a heuristic.
The problem with using trial and error to solve a word jumble is
that there are 782,200 (10!/(2!*2!)) different ways to combine
those letters. At least with the algorithm method, you are sure
to get through them all without counting any of them twice.
However, it would help to use shortcuts/heuristics to reduce
the options we need to try, such as:
1.putting a “Y” at the end.
2.thinking about where the other “Y” could go.
3.trying the “H” preceded by “C” and “S” and “P” before
trying other combinations.
4.speculating that with so few vowels, the “O”s will probably
not be together.
1. C L O O Y S P H Y G
SP S
P PS LY O
CYHO
OCL H
OGGY
Y
Algorithms: Not Just Thoroughness
A father and a son are currently 40 and 10; when will
the son be half the father’s age?
It might be tempting to use trial and error, but algebra
gives us an algorithm, a single, certain, systematic path
to the answer:
x = ½ (x + 30)
2x = x + 30
x = 30
Answer: when the son is 30, the
father will be is 60.
Three Methods of Problem Solving
Problem: given 100 one-foot lengths of fence, construct a
rectangle that encloses the biggest area.
Trial and error approach:
make a lot of rectangles W W
½ (100-2W)
For each width: Total Area
Confirmation Fixation/
bias mental set
Heuristics
(which help solve problems
quickly but can lead to
mistaken conclusions)
Confirmation Bias
Confirmation bias refers Studying Confirmation Bias:
to our tendency to search Peter Wason’s Selection Test
for information which 1.He gave the sequence of
confirms our current numbers “2, 4, 6.”
theory, disregarding
contradictory evidence. 2.He asked students to guess
Natural tendency: “If I’m his rule, and ask him whether
right, then fact “C” will other certain numbers fit the
confirm my theory. I must rule.
look for fact “C.” The problem was not the
Scientific practice: “If I’m students’ theory, but their
right, then fact “D” will strategy. If you think the rule is
disprove or at least “even numbers,” what numbers
disconfirm my theory. I would you need to ask him
must search for fact “D.” about to TEST rather that
CONFIRM your theory?
Confirmation Bias Test
You are given the cards below, that have a letter on one
side and a numeral on the other side.
Claim: if a card has a vowel on one side, then it has an
odd number on the other side.
Which two cards would you turn over to find out if the
claim is true?
Other Problem-Solving Habits
Mental set
The tendency to
approach problems using
a mindset (procedures
and methods) that has
worked previously.
Fixation
The tendency to get
stuck in one way of
thinking; an inability
to see a problem from
a new perspective.
Fixation
Problem: how can you arrange six
matches to form four equilateral
triangles?
When people struggle with this,
what fixation is going on?
Hint: what assumption might be
fixed in their minds?
Use four
straight lines to
connect the
nine dots. If you
already know
the solution, let
others figure it
out.
Intuition Making Quick Judgments and
Decisions
As with problem-solving, there
The human cognitive style are mental habits which make
of making judgments and intuition-style judgments
decisions is more efficient simpler and quicker, but may
than logical. lead to errors:
The quick-acting,
1.the availability heuristic
automatic source of ideas
we use instead of careful 2.overconfidence
reasoning is known as 3.belief perseverance
intuition. 4.framing
Using intuition to make a
decision has some downsi All of these habits enable us
des, as we’ll soon see, but
it also has some benefits. to quickly make hundreds of
http://bg3.nationalgeogra small “gut” decisions each day
phic.com/episode/20/ without bothering with
systematic reasoning.
The Availability Heuristic
We use the availability
heuristic when we estimate
the likelihood of an event
based on how much it
stands out in our mind, that
is, how much it’s available
as a mental reference.
Overconfidence in Examples:
judgments refers to our thinking you can put
tendency to be more off work and still get
confident than correct. it done well
We overestimate the thinking you have
accuracy of our test material
estimates, predictions, mastered when you
and knowledge. scan it and it feels
familiar.
Belief Overcoming
Perseverance Belief
Error Perseverance
“My mind is made up; do not You can’t cure someone else of
confuse me with the facts.” belief perseverance. Just telling
Belief perseverance is the someone the “right”
tendency to hold onto our beliefs information won’t override it;
when facing contrary evidence. people facing opposing
information tend to become
We interpret information in a way MORE polarized in their beliefs.
that fits our beliefs. We might Instead, watch for this in
claim that the new information is yourself. Take opposing views
wrong, biased, or just “doesn’t and information seriously,
make sense.” always assuming that you could
Stereotypes are maintained by be wrong.
this error; people often disregard
examples contradicting stereotypes
by treating the new information as
merely an exception, and not a
challenge to the rule.
Framing
• The way we present an • Those who understand
issue, it can significantly the power of framing
affect decisions and
can use it to influence
judgements. In surgery –
10% die vs. 90% survive our decisions
• To scare people frame risks (politicians, advertising,
as numbers, not etc.)
percentages . Chemical
exposure projected to kill 10
out of every 10 million
people vs .000001%
How to use it Intuition
well When it’s
How it may effective
We have seen that have been
in complex adaptive Intuition is effective
situations, it helps when it is a product
to use careful Judging quickly of expertise built up
reasoning to avoid what to eat and from trial and error;
mistakes made by what might kill us this hones one’s
intuitive judgments. might have helped judgment to the
However, research our ancestors point of being more
supports the idea survive long accurate than logical
that sometimes we enough to analysis.
need to let our reproduce. Examples: knowing
unconscious mind The times that our the sex of a chick,
do some work. intuition was making a diagnosis,
Incubation refers to incorrect may not speed chess,
the power of taking have been fatal; if quarterback
a break from careful humans avoided decisions
thinking, even to all red plants The mind’s ability to
“sleep on it,” to instead of judge a situation
allow leaps in poisonous berries, from experience is
cognition. they might have more efficient than
been hungry, but any step-by-step
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u3k7lykTW
Tk
still alive. analysis.
Do Other Species Think?
If thinking consists of
understanding concepts, including
words, numbers, and qualities,
then...
many creatures can memorize
the names of many objects.
Parrots can speak the names.
birds can sort objects by shape,
color, and type.
Alex the African parrot could add
numbers, and answer complex
questions such as “what color
bigger”? [“Tell me the color of the
object that is the bigger of these
two.”]
Uses of Language
What is language made of?
We can hear about and Phonemes are the smallest
understand phenomena units of sound (vowels and
we have never consonants).
experienced.
Morphemes are the units
We can connect to people
of meaning, i.e. words and
far away. meaningful parts of words
We can make plans and such as suffixes, prefixes).
have others carry them Grammar refers to the
out.
rules for using words,
We can know what including semantics,
another person is thinking definitions, connotations,
more directly than just by and syntax (how the order
observing their behavior. of words makes meaning).
We can store information.
abbreviate
How do we learn language? absorbent
Remember:
language
functions are
divided in the
brain.
Language Influencing Thought
Linguistic
determinism:
the idea that
our specific
language
determines
how we think
Color Perception
We use our native language to
classify and to remember
colors. Different languages may
vary in where they put the
separation between “blue” and
“green,” or they may not have
separate words for these
colors.
Which squares are green?
teal? blue?
Languages Improve Thinking
The Bilingual Advantage
People who are bilingual
have numerous brain
connections and neural
networks.
They also have a hidden
talent, the ability to
suppress one language
while learning another.
This ability tends to go
along with other forms of
executive control, such as
resisting distraction and
inhibiting impulses.