Literature DB >> 12850993

Rethinking temporal contiguity and the judgement of causality: effects of prior knowledge, experience, and reinforcement procedure.

Marc J Buehner1, Jon May.   

Abstract

Time plays a pivotal role in causal inference. Nonetheless most contemporary theories of causal induction do not address the implications of temporal contiguity and delay, with the exception of associative learning theory. Shanks, Pearson, and Dickinson (1989) and several replications (Reed, 1992, 1999) have demonstrated that people fail to identify causal relations if cause and effect are separated by more than two seconds. In line with an associationist perspective, these findings have been interpreted to indicate that temporal lags universally impair causal induction. This interpretation clashes with the richness of everyday causal cognition where people apparently can reason about causal relations involving considerable delays. We look at the implications of cause-effect delays from a computational perspective and predict that delays should generally hinder reasoning performance, but that this hindrance should be alleviated if reasoners have knowledge of the delay. Two experiments demonstrated that (1) the impact of delay on causal judgement depends on participants' expectations about the timeframe of the causal relation, and (2) the free-operant procedures used in previous studies are ill-suited to study the direct influences of delay on causal induction, because they confound delay with weaker evidence for the relation in question. Implications for contemporary causal learning theories are discussed.

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Mesh:

Year:  2003        PMID: 12850993     DOI: 10.1080/02724980244000675

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Q J Exp Psychol A        ISSN: 0272-4987


  21 in total

1.  Temporal contiguity and contingency judgments: a Pavlovian analogue.

Authors:  Lorraine G Allan; Jason M Tangen; Robert Wood; Taral Shah
Journal:  Integr Physiol Behav Sci       Date:  2003 Jul-Sep

2.  Causal impressions: predicting when, not just whether.

Authors:  Michael E Young; Ester T Rogers; Joshua S Beckmann
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2005-03

3.  Models of covariation-based causal judgment: a review and synthesis.

Authors:  José C Perales; David R Shanks
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2007-08

4.  Space, time, and causality in the human brain.

Authors:  Adam J Woods; Roy H Hamilton; Alexander Kranjec; Preet Minhaus; Marom Bikson; Jonathan Yu; Anjan Chatterjee
Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2014-02-19       Impact factor: 6.556

5.  Time perception and the experience of agency.

Authors:  Carola Haering; Andrea Kiesel
Journal:  Psychol Res       Date:  2015-03-07

6.  Causing time: Evaluating causal changes to the when rather than the whether of an outcome.

Authors:  W James Greville; Marc J Buehner; Mark K Johansen
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2020-02

Review 7.  Contiguity and covariation in human causal inference.

Authors:  Marc J Buehner
Journal:  Learn Behav       Date:  2005-05       Impact factor: 1.986

8.  Structural awareness mitigates the effect of delay in human causal learning.

Authors:  W James Greville; Adam A Cassar; Mark K Johansen; Marc J Buehner
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2013-08

9.  Spontaneous assimilation of continuous values and temporal information in causal induction.

Authors:  Jessecae K Marsh; Woo-Kyoung Ahn
Journal:  J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn       Date:  2009-03       Impact factor: 3.051

10.  The spatiotemporal distinctiveness of direct causation.

Authors:  Michael E Young; Steven Sutherland
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2009-08
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