Department of Philosophy, Duke University, United States; Department of Philosophy and Center for Cognitive Neuroscience, Duke University, United States.
Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy, University of Toronto, Canada.
Cognition. 2019 Sep;190:157-164. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2019.05.006. Epub 2019 May 11.
People's causal judgments are susceptible to the action effect, whereby they judge actions to be more causal than inactions. We offer a new explanation for this effect, the counterfactual explanation: people judge actions to be more causal than inactions because they are more inclined to consider the counterfactual alternatives to actions than to consider counterfactual alternatives to inactions. Experiment 1a conceptually replicates the original action effect for causal judgments. Experiment 1b confirms a novel prediction of the new explanation, the reverse action effect, in which people judge inactions to be more causal than actions in overdetermination cases. Experiment 2 directly compares the two effects in joint-causation and overdetermination scenarios and conceptually replicates them with new scenarios. Taken together, these studies provide support for the new counterfactual explanation for the action effect in causal judgment.
人们的因果判断容易受到行为效应的影响,即他们判断行为比不行为更具因果关系。我们为这种效应提供了一个新的解释,即反事实解释:人们判断行为比不行为更具因果关系,是因为他们更倾向于考虑行为的反事实替代方案,而不是考虑不行为的反事实替代方案。实验 1a 在因果判断中概念上复制了原始的行为效应。实验 1b 证实了新解释的一个新预测,即反行动效应,即在过度决定的情况下,人们判断不行为比行为更具因果关系。实验 2 在共同因果和过度决定的情况下直接比较了这两种效应,并以新的情况对其进行了概念复制。总之,这些研究为因果判断中行为效应的新反事实解释提供了支持。