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2.Andrea diSessa: A. A. diSessa (1983). “Phenomenology and the Evolution of Intuition.” In ed. D. Gentner and A. L. Stevens.Mental Models. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.
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3.People understand electricity:D. Gentner and D. R. Gentner (1983). “Flowing Waters or Teeming Crowds: Mental Models of Electricity.” InMental Models.
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4.Quote from an experimental participant: W. Kempton (1986). “Two Theories of Home Heat Control.”Cognitive Science10: 75–90.
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5.Thinking, Fast and Slow: D. Kahneman (2011).Thinking, Fast and Slow. New York: Farrar, Straus.
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6.associative versus rule-based thinking: S. A. Sloman (1996). “The Empirical Case for Two Systems of Reasoning.”Psychological Bulletin119(1): 3–22.
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7.System 1 versus System 2: K. E. Stanovich and R. F. West (2000). “Individual Differences in Reasoning: Implications for the Rationality Debate.”Behavioral and Brain Sciences23(5): 645–726.
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8.Aristotle and Plato quotes: We thank Tamar Gendler for these quotes.
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9.Frederick refers:S. Frederick (2005). “Cognitive Reflection and Decision Making.”Journal of Economic Perspectives19(4): 25–42.
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10.They make fewer errors and are less likely to fall for tricks: K. Stanovich (2011).Rationality and the Reflective Mind. New York: Oxford University Press.
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11.Profound versus random words: G. Pennycook, J. A. Cheyne, N. Barr, D. J. Koehler, and J. A. Fugelsang (2015). “On the Reception and Detection of Pseudo-profound Bullshit.”Judgment and Decision Making10(6): 549–563.
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12.bigger reward: S. Frederick (2005). “Cognitive Reflection and Decision Making.”Journal of Economic Perspectives19(4): 25–42.
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13.Dark versus milk chocolate: Shane Frederick, personal communication.
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14.Belief in God: A. Shenhav, D. G. Rand, and J. D. Greene (2012). “Divine Intuition: Cognitive Style Influences Belief in God.”Journal of Experimental Psychology: General141(3): 423–428. For a review, see G. Pennycook (2014). “Evidence That Analytic Cognitive Style Influences Religious Belief: Comment On.”Intelligence43: 21–26.
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15.CRT predicts illusion of explanatory depth: P. M. Fernbach, S. A. Sloman, R. St. Louis, and J. N. Shube (2013). “Explanation Fiends and Foes: How Mechanistic Detail Determines Understanding and Preference.”Journal of Consumer Research39(5): 1115–1131.
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第五章 身体记忆卡和世界存储器
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1.Minsky quote
:Wired Magazine, Issue 11
:08, August 2003. archive.wired.com/wired/archive/11.08/view.html?pg=3.
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2.GOFAI: J. Haugeland (1989).Artificial Intelligence: The Very Idea. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
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3.Frame problem: For a philosophical analysis, see H. L. Dreyfus (2007). “Why Heideggerian AI Failed and How Fixing It Would Require Making It More Heideggerian.”Philosophical Psychology20(2): 247–268.
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4.Rodney Brooks’s tic-tac-toe game: www.bostonmagazine.com/news/article/2014/10/28/rodney-brooks-robotics.
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5.Reading text with an eye tracker: Reviewed in P. S. Churchland, V. S. Ramachandran, and T. J. Sejnowski (1994). “A Critique of Pure Vision.” In ed. C. Koch and J. L. Davis,Large-Scale Neuronal Theories of the Brain. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 23–60.
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6.“outside memory store”: J. K. O’Regan (1992). “Solving the ‘Real’ Mysteries of Visual Perception: The World as an Outside Memory.”Canadian Journal of Psychology/Revue canadienne de psychologie46(3): 461–488.
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7.What experimenters were wearing: E. S. Parker, L. Cahill, and J. L. McGaugh (2006). “A Case of Unusual Autobiographical Remembering.”Neurocase12 (1): 35–49.
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8.calculating trajectories: A strategy like this for catching balls (to solve what vision scientists call the outfielder problem) was proposed by B. V. H. Saxberg (1987). “Projected Free Fall Trajectories. I. Theory and Simulation.”Biological Cybernetics: 56(2–3): 159–175.
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9.angle is always increasing at a constant rate: A strategy first suggested by S. Chapman (1968). “Catching a Baseball.”American Journal of Physics36(10): 868–870.
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10.players catching real balls: P. McLeod and Z. Dienes (1993). “Running to Catch the Ball.”Nature362(6415): 23; P. McLeod and Z. Dienes (1996). “Do Fielders Know Where to Go to Catch the Ball or Only How to Get There?”Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance22(3): 531–543.
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