1 Department of Psychology, Harvard University.
2 Centre National de le Recherche Scientifique, Ecole Normale Superieure/PSL/Institut Jean Nicod.
Psychol Sci. 2017 Nov;28(11):1649-1662. doi: 10.1177/0956797617719930. Epub 2017 Sep 28.
When object A moves adjacent to a stationary object, B, and in that instant A stops moving and B starts moving, people irresistibly see this as an event in which A causes B to move. Real-world causal collisions are subject to Newtonian constraints on the relative speed of B following the collision, but here we show that perceptual constraints on the relative speed of B (which align imprecisely with Newtonian principles) define two categories of causal events in perception. Using performance-based tasks, we show that triggering events, in which B moves noticeably faster than A, are treated as being categorically different from launching events, in which B does not move noticeably faster than A, and that these categories are unique to causal events (Experiments 1 and 2). Furthermore, we show that 7- to 9-month-old infants are sensitive to this distinction, which suggests that this boundary may be an early-developing component of causal perception (Experiment 3).
当物体 A 移动到静止物体 B 的旁边,并且在那个瞬间 A 停止移动而 B 开始移动时,人们会不可避免地将其视为 A 导致 B 移动的事件。现实世界中的因果碰撞受到牛顿定律对碰撞后 B 的相对速度的限制,但在这里我们表明,B 的相对速度的感知限制(与牛顿原理并不完全一致)定义了感知中两种因果事件的类别。通过基于表现的任务,我们表明,触发事件,即 B 明显比 A 移动得更快,被视为与启动事件(即 B 没有明显快于 A 移动)有明显区别,并且这些类别是因果事件特有的(实验 1 和实验 2)。此外,我们表明,7 至 9 个月大的婴儿对这种区别很敏感,这表明这种边界可能是因果感知的早期发展组成部分(实验 3)。