The role of learning data in causal reasoning about observations and interventions

2009 | conference paper. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

Jump to: Cite & Linked | Documents & Media | Details | Version history

Cite this publication

​The role of learning data in causal reasoning about observations and interventions​
Meder, B.; Hagmayer, Y. & Waldmann, M. R. ​ (2009)
Memory & Cognition37(3) pp. 249​-264. ​49th Annual Meeting of Experimental Psychologists​, Trier, GERMANY.
Austin​: Psychonomic Soc Inc. DOI: https://doi.org/10.3758/MC.37.3.249 

Documents & Media

document.pdf242.82 kBAdobe PDF

License

GRO License GRO License

Details

Authors
Meder, Bjoern; Hagmayer, York; Waldmann, Michael R. 
Abstract
Recent studies have shown that people have the capacity to derive interventional predictions for previously unseen actions from observational knowledge, a finding that challenges associative theories of causal learning and reasoning (e.g., Meder, Hagmayer, & Waldmann, 2008). Although some researchers have claimed that such inferences are based mainly on qualitative reasoning about the structure of a causal system (e.g., Sloman, 2005), we propose that people use both the causal structure and its parameters for their inferences. We here employ an observational trial-by-trial learning paradigm to test this prediction. In Experiment 1, the causal strength of the links within a given causal model was varied, whereas in Experiment 2, base rate information was manipulated while keeping the structure of the model constant. The results show that learners' causal judgments were strongly affected by the observed learning data despite being presented with identical hypotheses about causal structure. The findings show furthermore that participants correctly distinguished between observations and hypothetical interventions. However, they did not adequately differentiate between hypothetical and counterfactual interventions.
Issue Date
2009
Publisher
Psychonomic Soc Inc
Journal
Memory & Cognition 
Conference
49th Annual Meeting of Experimental Psychologists
Conference Place
Trier, GERMANY
ISSN
0090-502X
Language
English

Reference

Citations


Social Media