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Questioning the preparatory function of counterfactual thinking
Authors:Hugo Mercier  Jonathan J Rolison  Marta Stragà  Donatella Ferrante  Clare R Walsh  Vittorio Girotto
Institution:1.Institut des Sciences Cognitives Marc Jeannerod, CNRS Université Lyon 1 UMR5304,Bron,France;2.University of Essex,Colchester,UK;3.Ca’ Foscari University of Venice,Venice,Italy;4.University of Trieste,Trieste,Italy;5.University of Plymouth,Plymouth,UK;6.University IUAV of Venice,Venice,Italy
Abstract:Why do individuals mentally modify reality (e.g., “If it hadn’t rained, we would have won the game”)? According to the dominant view, counterfactuals primarily serve to prepare future performance. In fact, individuals who have just failed a task tend to modify the uncontrollable features of their attempt (e.g., “If the rules of the game were different, I would have won it”), generating counterfactuals that are unlikely to play any preparatory role. By contrast, they generate prefactuals that focus on the controllable features of their ensuing behavior (e.g., “If I concentrate more, I will win the next game”). Here, we test whether this tendency is robust and general. Studies 1a and 1b replicate this tendency and show that it occurs regardless of whether individuals think about their failures or their successes. Study 2 shows that individuals generate relatively few controllable counterfactuals, unless explicitly prompted to do so. These results raise some questions regarding the generality of the dominant view according to which counterfactuals mainly serve a preparatory function.
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