Explanation…demands a theory…that predicts effects of the manipulated variables on performance of each task. Crude distinctions between “systems” are seldom sufficient for this purpose. Further, once a sufficiently elaborate process model is in hand, it is not clear that the notion of a system is any longer of much use. Once the model has been spelled out, it makes little difference whether its components are called systems, modules, processes, or something else; the explanatory burden is carried by the nature of the proposed mechanisms and their interactions, not by what they are called. (Hintzman 1990, p. 121)
Open Access 01-05-2010 | Letter to the Editor
We favor formal models of heuristics rather than lists of loose dichotomies: a reply to Evans and Over
Published in: Cognitive Processing | Issue 2/2010
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