Sunday, 23 November 2008

Swatland early morning on the island

Swatland early morning on the islandSwatland Connecticut ShoreSwatland By the SeaSwatland Best Friends
The researchers constructed additions, consisting of dots. For example, 12 dots plus 21 dots equaled 33 dots. Half of the additions were correct; the others were wrong, such as 12 dots plus 21 dots equaled 27 dots. Half of the additions had symmetric dot patterns (symmetric additions), the other half asymmetric patterns (asymmetric additions). These additions were presented briefly, e.g., in one experiment 1800 milliseconds, and student participants without training in mathematics had to decide immediately after the addition disappeared whether it was correct or incorrect.would have been less likely to be judged correct. The results clearly show that participants used symmetry as an indication to correctness, or beauty as truth.The authors have shown that people who do not have
Participants were more likely to judge symmetric additions than asymmetric additions to be correct. As this was also the case when additions in fact were incorrect, the finding cannot be explained by the fact that symmetric additions were easier to count or to estimate: In this case, symmetric additions that were incorrect

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