Explaining “Memory Free” Reasoning
- 1 November 1992
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Psychological Science
- Vol. 3 (6) , 332-339
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9280.1992.tb00042.x
Abstract
Cognitive theorists generally assume that reasoning depends on memory; accurate reasoning requires access to critical informational inputs. Although memory dependency seems self-evidently true, it has been disconfirmed in recent studies of children's logical, mathematical, and pragmatic inferences. These studies have led to a new account of cognitive development, fuzzy-trace theory, that stresses the unfolding of gist-driven intuitive reasoning processes, and that reformulates traditional conceptions of the relationship between verbatim and gist memories. Fuzzy-trace theory also identifies circumstances in which reasoning accuracy depends on memory accuracy.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- The memory independence effect: What do the data show? What do the theories claim?*1Developmental Review, 1992
- Transitivity judgments, memory for premises, and models of children's reasoning*1Developmental Review, 1992
- Forgetting in recognition memory with and without recollective experienceMemory & Cognition, 1991
- Fuzzy‐trace theory and framing effects in choice: Gist extraction, truncation, and conversionJournal of Behavioral Decision Making, 1991
- Independence between recalling interevent relations and specific events.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 1991
- Children's Proportional Judgments: The Importance of "Half"Child Development, 1991
- Resource panacea? Or just another day in the developmental forestDevelopmental Review, 1990
- Functions, operations, and decalage in the development of transitivity.Developmental Psychology, 1988
- Plausibility judgments versus fact retrieval: Alternative strategies for sentence verification.Psychological Review, 1982
- Age-Related Aspects of Comprehension and Inference from a Televised Dramatic NarrativeChild Development, 1978