The role of preschoolers' social understanding in evaluating the informativeness of causal interventions |
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Authors: | Kushnir Tamar Wellman Henry M Gelman Susan A |
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Affiliation: | aUniversity of Michigan, Department of Psychology, 1012 East Hall, 530 Church St, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1043, United States |
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Abstract: | Preschoolers use information from interventions, namely intentional actions, to make causal inferences. We asked whether children consider some interventions to be more informative than others based on two components of an actor’s knowledge state: whether an actor possesses causal knowledge, and whether an actor is allowed to use their knowledge in a given situation. Three- and four-year-olds saw a novel toy that activated in the presence of certain objects. Two actors, one knowledgeable about the toy and one ignorant, each tried to activate the toy with an object. In Experiment 1, either the actors chose objects or the child chose for them. In Experiment 2, the actors chose objects blindfolded. Objects were always placed on the toy simultaneously, and thus were equally associated with the effect. Preschoolers’ causal inferences favored the knowledgeable actor’s object only when he was allowed to choose it (Experiment 1). Thus, children consider both personal and situational constraints on knowledge when evaluating the informativeness of causal interventions. |
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Keywords: | Causal learning Intentional action Source knowledge Theory of mind |
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