The probability of conditionals: A review

Keywords: probabilities, subadditivity, mental models, conditionals, Conditional probabilities, The Equation

Abstract

A major hypothesis about conditionals is the Equation in which the probability of a conditional equals the corresponding conditional probability: p(if A then C) = p(C|A). Probabilistic theories often treat it as axiomatic, whereas it follows from the meanings of conditionals in the theory of mental models. In this theory, intuitive models (system 1) do not represent what is false, and so produce errors in estimates of p(if A then C), yielding instead p(A & C). Deliberative models (system 2) are normative, and yield the proportion of cases of A in which C holds, i.e., the Equation. Intuitive estimates of the probability of a conditional about unique events: If covid-19 disappears in the USA, then Biden will run for a second term, together with those of each of its clauses, are liable to yield joint probability distributions that sum to over 100%. The error, which is inconsistent with the probability calculus, is massive when participants estimate the joint probabilities of conditionals with each of the different possibilities to which they refer. This result and others under review corroborate the model theory.

Más información

Título de la Revista: PSYCHONOMIC BULLETIN AND REVIEW
Número: 29
Editorial: Springer Link, Nueva York (Estados Unidos)
Fecha de publicación: 2022
Página de inicio: 1
Página final: 20
Idioma: English
Financiamiento/Sponsor: Project CONICYT/ FONDECYT/REGULAR/FOLIO N° 1180013. PIA Ciencias Cognitivas, Centro de Investigación en Ciencias Cognitivas, Instituto de Estudios Humanísticos, Universidad de Talca. Grant from the DFG in proposal RA 1934/9-1 and RA 1934/4-1. Funding from
DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3758/s13423-021-01938-5

Notas: WOS - SCOPUS