| Literature DB >> 27913967 |
Brent Strickland1, Ike Silver2, Frank C Keil2.
Abstract
We conducted five sets of experiments asking whether psychological and physical events are construed in broadly different manners concerning the underlying textures of their causes. In Experiments 1a-1d, we found a robust tendency to estimate fewer causes (but not effects) for psychological than for physical events; Experiment 2 showed a similar pattern of results when participants were asked to generate hypothetical causes and effects; Experiment 3 revealed a greater tendency to ascribe linear chains of causes (but not effects) to physical events; Experiment 4 showed that the expectation of linear chains was related to intuitions about deterministic processes; and Experiment 5 showed that simply framing a given ambiguous event in psychological versus physical terms is sufficient to induce changes in the patterns of causal inferences. Adults therefore consistently show a tendency to think about psychological and physical events as being embedded in different kinds of causal structures.Entities:
Keywords: Causal reasoning; Domain specificity; Event representation
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 27913967 DOI: 10.3758/s13421-016-0668-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mem Cognit ISSN: 0090-502X