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Inference and coherence in causal-based artifact categorization
Authors:Guillermo Puebla  Sergio E. Chaigneau
Affiliation:1. Universidad de Tarapacá, General Velásquez 1775, Arica, Chile;2. Centro de Investigación de la Cognición, Facultad de Psicología, Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez, Diagonal Las Torres 2640, Peñalolén, Santiago, Chile
Abstract:In four experiments, we tested conditions under which artifact concepts support inference and coherence in causal categorization. In all four experiments, participants categorized scenarios in which we systematically varied information about artifacts’ associated design history, physical structure, user intention, user action and functional outcome, and where each property could be specified as intact, compromised or not observed. Consistently across experiments, when participants received complete information (i.e., when all properties were observed), they categorized based on individual properties and did not show evidence of using coherence to categorize. In contrast, when the state of some property was not observed, participants gave evidence of using available information to infer the state of the unobserved property, which increased the value of the available information for categorization. Our data offers answers to longstanding questions regarding artifact categorization, such as whether there are underlying causal models for artifacts, which properties are part of them, whether design history is an artifact’s causal essence, and whether physical appearance or functional outcome is the most central artifact property.
Keywords:Causal-based categorization   Artifacts   Essentialism   Coherence effect   Causal inference
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