反事实思维
因果关系
反事实条件
心理学
规范性
因果关系(物理学)
因果模型
因果推理
因果结构
情感(语言学)
社会心理学
因果推理
结果(博弈论)
认知心理学
认识论
认知
计量经济学
经济
物理
哲学
病理
数理经济学
医学
量子力学
神经科学
沟通
作者
Tobias Gerstenberg,Simon Stephan
出处
期刊:Cognition
[Elsevier BV]
日期:2021-11-01
卷期号:216: 104842-104842
被引量:3
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.cognition.2021.104842
摘要
When do people say that an event that did not happen was a cause? We extend the counterfactual simulation model (CSM) of causal judgment (Gerstenberg, Goodman, Lagnado, & Tenenbaum, 2021) and test it in a series of three experiments that look at people's causal judgments about omissions in dynamic physical interactions. The problem of omissive causation highlights a series of questions that need to be answered in order to give an adequate causal explanation of why something happened: what are the relevant variables, what are their possible values, how are putative causal relationships evaluated, and how is the causal responsibility for an outcome attributed to multiple causes? The CSM predicts that people make causal judgments about omissions in physical interactions by using their intuitive understanding of physics to mentally simulate what would have happened in relevant counterfactual situations. Prior work has argued that normative expectations affect judgments of omissive causation. Here we suggest a concrete mechanism of how this happens: expectations affect what counterfactuals people consider, and the more certain people are that the counterfactual outcome would have been different from what actually happened, the more causal they judge the omission to be. Our experiments show that both the structure of the physical situation as well as expectations about what will happen affect people's judgments.
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