Abstract

In determining the prime cause of a physical event, people often weight one of two entities in a symmetric physical relation as more important for bringing about the causal effect than the other. In a broad survey (Bender and Beller, 2011), we documented such weighting effects for different kinds of physical events and found that their direction and strength depended on a variety of factors. Here, we focus on one of those: adding a contrast situation that—while being formally irrelevant—foregrounds one of the factors and thus frames the task in a specific way. In two experiments, we generalize and validate our previous findings by using different stimulus material (in Experiment 1), by applying a different response format to elicit causal assignments, an analog rating scale instead of a forced-choice decision (in Experiment 2), and by eliciting explanations for the physical events in question (in both Experiments). The results generally confirm the contrast effects for both response formats; however, the effects were more pronounced with the force-choice format than with the rating format. People tended to refer to the given contrast in their explanations, which validates our manipulation. Finally, people’s causal assignments are reflected in the type of explanation given in that contrast and property explanations were associated with biased causal assignments, whereas relational explanations were associated with unbiased assignments. In the discussion, we pick up the normative questions of whether or not these contrast effects constitute a bias in causal reasoning.

Highlights

  • “Is the fact that a piece of wood floats on water basically due to (a) the piece of wood or (b) the water?”

  • In assigning a stronger causal weight to the piece of wood, people ignore the relational nature of the event and the inherent symmetry that the wood contributes to the floating to exactly the same extent as the water. This kind of weighting in symmetric physical settings is not unusual; we find it for different physical events and in different cultures (e.g., ; Peng and Knowles, 2003; Beller et al, 2009; Bender and Beller, 2011

  • Suggested: the presentation format of the task, that is whether an event is presented visually (Peng and Knowles, 2003; White, 2007) or verbally (Bender and Beller, 2011); the response format, that is whether participants are asked for responsibility assignments (Morris and Peng, 1994; Bender and Beller, 2011) or for explanations (Peng and Knowles, 2003); particular linguistic features such as agent and patient roles (Beller et al, 2009; Mayrhofer and Waldmann, 2014); and framing processes that define what to consider as the figure and what as the background of a scene (Bender and Beller, 2011)

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Summary

Introduction

“Is the fact that a piece of wood floats on water basically due to (a) the piece of wood or (b) the water?”. In assigning a stronger causal weight to the piece of wood, people ignore the relational nature of the event and the inherent symmetry that the wood contributes to the floating to exactly the same extent as the water This kind of weighting in symmetric physical settings is not unusual; we find it for different physical events and in different cultures (e.g., ; Peng and Knowles, 2003; Beller et al, 2009; Bender and Beller, 2011). In this paper we focus on one modulating factor: contrast situations that, in our examples, are formally irrelevant for the solution, but foreground one of the factors in question and frame the task in different ways

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