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thought experiment

a mental exercise in which a hypothesis or idea is put to the test without actually conducting an experiment or research project. The purpose is to explore the logical consequences of the hypothesis or idea. Thought experiments often involve arguments about events of a hypothetical or counterfactual nature, which nevertheless have implications for the actual world. They can be used to challenge the intellectual status quo, correct misinformation, identify flaws in an argument, or generate ideas as part of a problem-solving exercise. Thought experiments are most familiar in philosophy (e.g., Chinese room argument) but are also used in the physical sciences, generally as a step toward designing a physical experiment.

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Psychology term of the day

January 26th 2025

congenital oculomotor apraxia

congenital oculomotor apraxia

a condition, present at birth, in which a child is unable to fixate objects normally (see oculomotor apraxia). It is characterized by the absence of saccades and smooth-pursuit eye movements in the horizontal plane, but vertical eye movements are preserved: Children with this condition are often mistakenly thought to be blind. Between the ages of 4 and 6 months, they develop thrusting, horizontal head movements, sometimes blinking prominently or rubbing their eyelids when they attempt to change fixation. The cause of congenital oculomotor apraxia is unknown, but there is usually an improvement with age.