Abstract

Humans, even babies, perceive causality when one shape moves briefly and linearly after another. Motion timing is crucial in this and causal impressions disappear with short delays between motions. However, the role of temporal information is more complex: it is both a cue to causality and a factor that constrains processing. It affects ability to distinguish causality from non-causality, and social from mechanical causality. Here we study both issues with 3- to 7-year-olds and adults who saw two computer-animated squares and chose if a picture of mechanical, social or non-causality fit each event best. Prior work fit with the standard view that early in development, the distinction between the social and physical domains depends mainly on whether or not the agents make contact, and that this reflects concern with domain-specific motion onset, in particular, whether the motion is self-initiated or not. The present experiments challenge both parts of this position. In Experiments 1 and 2, we showed that not just spatial, but also animacy and temporal information affect how children distinguish between physical and social causality. In Experiments 3 and 4 we showed that children do not seem to use spatio-temporal information in perceptual causality to make inferences about self- or other-initiated motion onset. Overall, spatial contact may be developmentally primary in domain-specific perceptual causality in that it is processed easily and is dominant over competing cues, but it is not the only cue used early on and it is not used to infer motion onset. Instead, domain-specific causal impressions may be automatic reactions to specific perceptual configurations, with a complex role for temporal information.

Highlights

  • Humans, including infants from 6 months, perceive causality when one geometric shape moves briefly after another, on a linear path

  • Motion timing is crucial in this and causal impressions disappear with short delays between the motions

  • Our results suggest that simultaneous motion-at-a-distance is an important cue for social causality independent of concern with motion onset, and that contact motion is a stronger cue for physical causality

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Summary

Introduction

Humans, including infants from 6 months, perceive causality when one geometric shape moves briefly after another, on a linear path. It affects ability to distinguish causality from non-causality, as commonly emphasized, and to distinguish social from mechanical causality We consider this wider role of temporal information with children aged 3 to 7 years and adults. Just as we see a triangle when shown three appropriately configured corners (Kanizsa, 1976), we see causality, one event producing another, when shown two motions in appropriately configured sequence. This provides us with a perceptual identification of what cause is that does not require any conceptual knowledge or understanding

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