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What is Convince Me?
Many researchers have illustrated the difficulties and challenges
that children and adults face with formal and informal reasoning.
Convince Me is a "reasoner's workbench" computer program to
help students structure, restructure, and assess their knowledge
about often controversial situations.
Convince
Me guides people to cyclically (1) categorize their own
propositions as either evidence or hypotheses, (2) indicate
the reliability of their various evidence, (3) connect their
propositions with both explanatory and contradictory/competitive
links, and (4) rate each proposition's believability. After
each (1-4) cycle, users can elicit feedback from a connectionist
model, called ECHO, to help improve the coherence of their
arguments.
Studies suggest that although the distinguishing
characteristics of data and theory are vague--even for experts
who study scientific reasoning professionally--Convince
Me lends a sophistication to novices' discriminative criteria
across contexts, making their epistemic categorizations more
expert-like both during, and after, its use.
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TEC and ECHO
The Theory of Explanatory Coherence (TEC) and its associated
connectionist model, ECHO, offers an account of how people
decide the plausibility of beliefs asserted in an explanation
or argument (Ranney & Thagard, 1988; Thagard, 1989).
TEC includes several prominent principles of explanatory
coherence, such as parsimony, contradiction, explanatory symmetry,
data priority, and system coherence. ECHO implements TEC in
a constraint-satisfying, connectionist program. The model
passes activation--the "currency of believability"--among
evidential and hypothetical propositions (nodes in a network)
such that propositions that eventually exhibit high activation
may be regarded as accepted, while propositions with low activation
may be thought of as rejected.
We have found that ECHO usefully predicts how people evaluate
hypotheses, evidence, and other propositions regarding various
situations.
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