Data di Pubblicazione:
2009
Abstract:
A wide range of essential reasoning tasks rely on contradiction identification, a cornerstone of human rationality, communication and debate founded on the inversion of the logical operators ‘‘Every’’ and ‘‘Some.’’ A high-density electroencephalographic (EEG) study was performed in 11 normal young adults. The cerebral network involved in the identification of contradiction included the orbito-frontal and anterior-cingulate cortices and the temporo-polar cortices. The event-related dynamic
of this network showed an early negative deflection lasting 500 ms after sentence presentation. This was followed by a positive deflection lasting 1.5 s, which was different for the two logical operators. A lesser degree of network activation (either in neuron number or their level of phase locking or both) occurred while processing statements with ‘‘Some,’’ suggesting that this was a relatively simpler scenario
with one example to be figured out, instead of the many examples or the absence of a counterexample searched for while processing statements with ‘‘Every.’’
Tipologia CRIS:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Human reasoning; contradiction; Syllogism
Elenco autori:
Mt, Medaglia; F., Tecchio; S., Seri; G., Di Lorenzo; Vm, Abrusci; Casadio, Claudia; Pm, Rossini; C., Porcaro
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