Patricia Cheng

Patricia Wenjie Cheng (born 1952) is a Chinese American psychologist.[1] She is a leading researcher in cognitive psychology who works on human reasoning. She is best known for her psychological work on human understanding of causality. Her "power theory of the probabilistic contrast model," or power PC theory (1997)[2] posits that people filter observations of events through a basic belief that causes have the power to generate (or prevent) their effects, thereby inferring specific cause-effect relations.

Patricia Cheng
Born1952
Alma materBarnard College, University of Michigan
Awards

Biography

Cheng was born in Hong Kong in 1952. She received her B.A. from Barnard College, and her PhD in Psychology from the University of Michigan in 1980.[1] She then taught at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.[1] After post-doctoral training in the Department of Computer Science at Carnegie-Mellon University, she joined the faculty of the University of California, Los Angeles in 1986, where she is now a Professor of Psychology.[1] Cheng received a fellowship from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation in 2000.[3] She is also a Fellow of the Association for Psychological Science.[4]

Selected works

See also

References

  1. "September, 2013 Vita | Patricia Wenjie Cheng". UCLA Reasoning Lab. Retrieved 2019-12-24.
  2. Cheng, P.W. (1997). "From Covariation to Causation: A Causal Power Theory." Psychological Review 104: 367-405.
  3. See list of Guggenheim Fellows on the Guggenheim Foundation website. Archived 2008-10-24 at the Wayback Machine
  4. "APS Fellows". Association for Psychological Science. Archived from the original on 2018-05-20. Retrieved 2018-05-19.
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