Goals affect the perceived quality of explanations

Year of Conference
2015

Type

Conference Proceedings
Abstract

Do people evaluate the quality of explanations differently depending on their goals? In particular, are explanations of different kinds (formal, mechanistic, teleological) judged differently depending on the future judgments the evaluator anticipates making? We report two studies demonstrating that the perceived “goodness” of explanations depends on the evaluator’s current goals, with explanations receiving a relative boost when they are based on relationships that support anticipated judgments. These findings shed light on the functions of explanation and support pragmatic and pluralist approaches to explanation.
 

Conference Name
Proceedings of the 37th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society
Pages
2469-2474
Publisher
Austin, TX: Cognitive Science Society
Documents