Abstract

A critical component of scientific reasoning is the consideration of alternative explanations. Recognizing that decades of cognitive psychology research have demonstrated that relative cognitive accessibility, or “what comes to mind,” strongly affects how people reason in a given context, we articulate a simple “cognitive accessibility rule”, namely that alternative explanations are considered less frequently when an explanation with relatively high accessibility is offered first. In a series of four experiments, we test the cognitive accessibility rule in the context of consideration of alternative explanations for six physical scenarios commonly found in introductory physics curricula. First, we administer free recall and recognition tasks to operationally establish and distinguish between the relative accessibility and availability of common explanations for the physical scenarios. Then, we offer either high or low accessibility explanations for the physical scenarios and determine the extent to which students consider alternatives to the given explanations. We find two main results consistent across algebra- and calculus-based university level introductory physics students for multiple answer formats. First, we find evidence that, at least for some contexts, most explanatory factors are cognitively available to students but not cognitively accessible. Second, we empirically verify the cognitive accessibility rule and demonstrate that the rule is strongly predictive, accounting for up to 70% of the variance of the average student consideration of alternative explanations across scenarios. Overall, we find that cognitive accessibility can help to explain biases in the consideration of alternatives in reasoning about simple physical scenarios, and these findings lend support to the growing number of science education studies demonstrating that tasks relevant to science education curricula often involve rapid, automatic, and potentially predictable processes and outcomes.Received 18 August 2017DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevPhysEducRes.14.010120Published by the American Physical Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license. Further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the published article’s title, journal citation, and DOI.Published by the American Physical SocietyPhysics Subject Headings (PhySH)Research AreasConcepts & principlesLearning theoryScientific reasoning & problem solvingPhysics Education Research

Highlights

  • One hallmark of successful reasoning, especially in science, is the systematic consideration of multiple explanations

  • The first is that in the context of physical scenarios commonly found in physics education curriculum, we provided systematic, quantitative evidence for the accessibility rule, namely, that alternative explanations are considered less frequently when an explanatory factor with relatively high accessibility is offered first

  • We demonstrated that the accessibility rule is a quantitatively predictive model: for the population of students studied, the average accessibility of the factors in each scenario can explain about 70% of the variance of the average proportion of students considering alternative explanations

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

One hallmark of successful reasoning, especially in science, is the systematic consideration of multiple explanations. The first is to empirically demonstrate that the relative accessibility of explanatory factors, which, similar to the study discussed above, is operationally definable and measurable, plays a significant role in modulating reasoning bias for educationally important physical science concepts and phenomena. As such we are applying the general cognitive psychological phenomenon of the influence of accessibility on reasoning to educationally relevant physics content. This observation plays an important role for interpreting the meaning and possible mechanisms for the effect of accessibility on reasoning, and this in turn may have implications for instructional strategies

Theoretical background and context
EXPERIMENT 1
Methods and materials
Results
EXPERIMENT 2
Method and materials
EXPERIMENT 3
EXPERIMENT 4
Findings
CONCLUSIONS AND DISCUSSION
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