The Mental Models Global Laboratory
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    • The 2023 Meeting in Honor of Phil Johnson-Laird
    • Mental Models in Thinking and Reasoning (ICT 2021)
    • Mental Models of Time (CNS 2019)
    • Bridging the Gap Between Human and Automated Reasoning (CogSci 2017)
    • The 2016 Meeting in Memory of Vittorio Girotto
    • Mental Models and Reasoning Symposium (ICT 2016)
    • Mental Models and Reasoning Symposium (ICT 2012)
    • The 2006 International Meeting on Mental Models in Reasoning
  • Labs
    • Freiburg
    • Giessen
    • Georgetown
    • Naval Research Lab
    • Oxford
    • Penn
    • Trinity College Dublin
    • UC Santa Barbara
    • UQAM

Content on this site is licensed under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.

About Us

The Mental Models Global Laboratory organizes worldwide research findings on the strengths and frailties of human reasoning. We are a group of professors, scientists, and students who develop theories, run experiments, and write computer programs concerning how people reason in domains such as space, time, and causality.

The idea that guides our research is that people reason about the world by constructing small-scale models of possible situations. Reasoners often base initial conclusions on the first model they consider — and so they make systematic errors. But they can overcome them to reason rationally by considering alternative models. Models explain the speed, the difficulty, the strategies, and the individual differences of human reasoning.



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Recent Posts

  • Ruth Byrne becomes a Fellow of the Cognitive Science Society January 14, 2025
  • Johnson-Laird on his close friend, Danny Kahneman (1934-2024) October 8, 2024
  • Mental models explain how people reason about possibilities: Johnson-Laird & Ragni August 12, 2024
  • Ambiguity detection and mental models of discourse May 22, 2024
  • Welcome, Selina Koralus! May 20, 2024
  • Illusory inferences and conditionals May 12, 2024
  • The role of emotions in the maintenance and revision of beliefs May 10, 2024
  • Eye movements are like gestures in the creation of informal algorithms May 7, 2024
  • What should replace the Turing Test? A commentary by Johnson-Laird and Ragni December 6, 2023

Content on this site is licensed under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.