scholarly journals Counterfactual thinking and recency effects in causal judgment

Cognition ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 212 ◽  
pp. 104708
Author(s):  
Paul Henne ◽  
Aleksandra Kulesza ◽  
Karla Perez ◽  
Augustana Houcek
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul Henne ◽  
Aleksandra Kulesza ◽  
Karla Perez ◽  
Augustana Houcek

People tend to judge more recent events, relative to earlier ones, as the cause of some particular outcome. For instance, people are more inclined to judge that the last basket, rather than the first, caused the team to win the basketball game. This recency effect, however, reverses in cases of overdetermination: people judge that earlier events, rather than more recent ones, caused the outcome when the event is individually sufficient but not individually necessary for the outcome. In five experiments (N = 5507), we find evidence for the recency effect and the primacy effect for causal judgment. Traditionally, these effects have been a problem for counterfactual views of causal judgment. However, an extension of a recent counterfactual model of causal judgment explains both the recency and the primacy effect. In line with the predictions of the extended counterfactual model, we also find that, regardless of causal structure, people tend to imagine the counterfactual alternative to the more recent event rather than to the earlier one (Experiment 2). Moreover, manipulating this tendency affects causal judgments in the ways predicted by this extended model: asking participants to imagine the counterfactual alternative to the earlier event weakens (and sometimes eliminates) the interaction between recency and causal structure, and asking participants to imagine the counterfactual alternative to the more recent event strengthens the interaction between recency and causal structure (Experiments 3 & 5). We discuss these results in relation to work on counterfactual thinking and causal modeling.


2003 ◽  
Vol 62 (4) ◽  
pp. 209-218
Author(s):  
A. N’gbala ◽  
N. R. Branscombe

When do causal attribution and counterfactual thinking facilitate one another, and when do the two responses overlap? Undergraduates (N = 78) both explained and undid, in each of two orders, events that were described either with their potential causes or not. The time to perform either response was recorded. Overall, mutation response times were shorter when performed after an attribution was made than before, while attribution response times did not vary as a consequence of sequence. Depending on whether the causes of the target events were described in the scenario or not, respondents undid the actor and assigned causality to another antecedent, or pointed to the actor for both responses. These findings suggest that counterfactual mutation is most likely to be facilitated by attribution, and that mutation and attribution responses are most likely to overlap when no information about potential causes of the event is provided.


1999 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katie Pasco ◽  
Heather Sakai ◽  
Amanda Woodside ◽  
Karen P. Leith ◽  
Julie Robinson

Author(s):  
Dayna Gomes ◽  
Kulnoor K. Sandhu ◽  
Hongyuan Qi ◽  
Chelsey M. Lee ◽  
Deborah A. Connolly

2006 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tarika Daftary ◽  
Melissa A. Berry Cahoon

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