Abstract

We explored the development of sensitivity to causal relations in children’s inductive reasoning. Children (5-, 8-, and 12-year-olds) and adults were given trials in which they decided whether a property known to be possessed by members of one category was also possessed by members of (a) a taxonomically related category or (b) a causally related category. The direction of the causal link was either predictive (prey→predator) or diagnostic (predator→prey), and the property that participants reasoned about established either a taxonomic or causal context. There was a causal asymmetry effect across all age groups, with more causal choices when the causal link was predictive than when it was diagnostic. Furthermore, context-sensitive causal reasoning showed a curvilinear development, with causal choices being most frequent for 8-year-olds regardless of context. Causal inductions decreased thereafter because 12-year-olds and adults made more taxonomic choices when reasoning in the taxonomic context. These findings suggest that simple causal relations may often be the default knowledge structure in young children’s inductive reasoning, that sensitivity to causal direction is present early on, and that children over-generalize their causal knowledge when reasoning.

Highlights

  • IntroductionFeeney / Journal of Experimental Child Psychology 122 (2014) 48–61

  • Children make category-based inductions when they infer properties and features in novel categories based on what they know to be true about familiar related categories

  • In addition to examining when children’s inductive inference becomes sensitive to causal relations, we examined how sophisticated children are in their use of such knowledge for reasoning

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Summary

Introduction

Feeney / Journal of Experimental Child Psychology 122 (2014) 48–61

Methods
Results
Conclusion
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