La influencia del modo verbal en el razonamiento de condicionales exceptivos: indicativo frente a subjuntivo. Conclusions: Exceptive conditionals in the subjunctive mood lead people to think in terms of dual possibilities, whereas the indicative mood leads people to consider just one possibility. Results: Both experiments showed that participants selected the possibility ‘B & not-A’ more frequently than the possibility ‘not-B & A’ when the conditional required the indicative mood, but they selected the possibilities ‘B & not-A’ and ‘not-B & A’ equally frequently when the conditional required the subjunctive mood. Method: A truth table task was employed to infer the mental representation that people have in mind when they reason with negative exceptive conditionals. Orlando Espino, Rafael Rodríguez, David Oliva and Isana Sánchez Curbeloīackground: We report the results of two experiments that examine the mental representations underlying the comprehension and reasoning stages of negative exceptive conditionals requiring the subjunctive (‘B a menos que A’ and ‘B a no ser que A’ = ‘B unless A’) and the indicative mood (‘B excepto si A’ and ‘B salvo si A’ = ‘B except if A’). THE INFLUENCE OF VERBAL MOOD IN EXCEPTIVE CONDITIONAL REASONING: INDICATIVE VERSUS SUBJUNCTIVE
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |