4.5 Article

Can being scared cause tummy aches? naive theories, ambiguous evidence, and preschoolers' causal inferences

Journal

DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 43, Issue 5, Pages 1124-1139

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/0012-1649.43.5.1124

Keywords

domain-general and domain-specific causal leaming; Bayesian models; naive theories; ambiguous evidence; psychosomatic causes

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Causal leaming requires integrating constraints provided by domain-specific theories with domain-general statistical leaming. In order to investigate the interaction between these factors, the authors presented preschoolers with stories pitting their existing theories against statistical evidence. Each child heard 2 stories in which 2 candidate causes co-occurred with an effect. Evidence was presented in the form: AB -> E; CA -> E; AD -> E; and so forth. In I story, all variables came from the same domain; in the other, the recurring candidate cause, A, came from a different domain (A was a psychological cause of a biological effect). After receiving this statistical evidence, children were asked to identify the cause of the effect on a new trial. Consistent with the predictions of a Bayesian model, all children were more likely to identify A as the cause within domains than across domains. Whereas 3.5-year-olds learned only from the within-domain evidence, 4- and 5-year-olds learned from the cross-domain evidence and were able to transfer their new expectations about psychosomatic causality to a novel task.

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