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Humans' folk physics is not enough to explain variations in their tool-using behavior

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PSYCHONOMIC BULLETIN & REVIEW
卷 13, 期 4, 页码 689-693

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PSYCHONOMIC SOC INC
DOI: 10.3758/BF03193982

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Two experiments examined adult humans' folk physics (i.e., their naturally occurring and spontaneous understanding of the physical world) using variations of trap-table problems used to study chimpanzees' folk physics. When presented with these problems, people unnecessarily avoided retrieving a reward by pulling a rake on the side of a table with a trapping hole-even though it was highly unlikely that the hole would trap the reward. However, when the distance between the reward and the trap was sufficiently large and the distance that the reward had to travel to be retrieved was sufficiently short, people preferred to retrieve a reward by pulling the rake on the side of the table with the trap. These results underscore that behavior during tool-use tasks has many possible causes, only one of which might be a subject's folk physics.

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