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Cognition and Communication

Book

Cognition and Communication

DOI link for Cognition and Communication

Cognition and Communication book

Judgmental Biases, Research Methods, and the Logic of Conversation

Cognition and Communication

DOI link for Cognition and Communication

Cognition and Communication book

Judgmental Biases, Research Methods, and the Logic of Conversation
ByNorbert Schwarz
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 1996
eBook Published 21 January 2014
Pub. Location New York
Imprint Psychology Press
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315805887
Pages 128
eBook ISBN 9781315805887
Subjects Behavioral Sciences, Humanities
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Schwarz, N. (1996). Cognition and Communication: Judgmental Biases, Research Methods, and the Logic of Conversation (1st ed.). Psychology Press. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315805887

ABSTRACT

Psychological research into human cognition and judgment reveals a wide range of biases and shortcomings. Whether we form impressions of other people, recall episodes from memory, report our attitudes in an opinion poll, or make important decisions, we often get it wrong. The errors made are not trivial and often seem to violate common sense and basic logic. A closer look at the underlying processes, however, suggests that many of the well known fallacies do not necessarily reflect inherent shortcomings of human judgment. Rather, they partially reflect that research participants bring the tacit assumptions that govern the conduct of conversation in daily life to the research situation. According to these assumptions, communicated information comes with a guarantee of relevance and listeners are entitled to assume that the speaker tries to be informative, truthful, relevant, and clear. Moreover, listeners interpret the speakers' utterances on the assumption that they are trying to live up to these ideals.

This book introduces social science researchers to the "logic of conversation" developed by Paul Grice, a philosopher of language, who proposed the cooperative principle and a set of maxims on which conversationalists implicitly rely. The author applies this framework to a wide range of topics, including research on person perception, decision making, and the emergence of context effects in attitude measurement and public opinion research. Experimental studies reveal that the biases generally seen in such research are, in part, a function of violations of Gricean conversational norms. The author discusses implications for the design of experiments and questionnaires and addresses the socially contextualized nature of human judgment.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter 1|6 pages

Cognition, Communication, and the Fallacies of Human Judgment

chapter 2|10 pages

Cognition and Communication: The Logic of Conversation

chapter 3|16 pages

The Conversational Relevance of "Irrelevant" Information

chapter 4|8 pages

Questions, Innuendos, and Assertions of the Obvious

chapter 5|22 pages

The Conversational Relevance of Formal Features of Questionnaires

chapter 6|20 pages

Making One's Contribution Informative: The Changing Meaning of Repeated Questions

chapter 7|10 pages

Judgment in a Social Context: (Some) Conclusions

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