Rational thinking and cognitive sophistication: development, cognitive abilities, and thinking dispositions.

Maggie E Toplak, Richard F West, Keith E Stanovich
Author Information
  1. Maggie E Toplak: Department of Psychology, York University.
  2. Richard F West: Department of Graduate Psychology, James Madison University.
  3. Keith E Stanovich: Department of Applied Psychology and Human Development, University of Toronto.

Abstract

We studied developmental trends in 5 important reasoning tasks that are critical components of the operational definition of rational thinking. The tasks measured denominator neglect, belief bias, base rate sensitivity, resistance to framing, and the tendency toward otherside thinking. In addition to age, we examined 2 other individual difference domains that index cognitive sophistication: cognitive ability (intelligence and executive functioning) and thinking dispositions (actively open-minded thinking, superstitious thinking, and need for cognition). All 5 reasoning domains were consistently related to cognitive sophistication regardless of how it was indexed (age, cognitive ability, thinking dispositions). The implications of these findings for taxonomies of developmental trends in rational thinking tasks are discussed.

MeSH Term

Adolescent
Aptitude
Child
Child Development
Cognition
Executive Function
Female
Humans
Intelligence
Intelligence Tests
Male
Parents
Personality
Psychological Tests
Regression Analysis
Superstitions
Thinking