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Spontaneous causal inferences
Authors:Ran R. Hassin  John A. BarghJames S. Uleman
Affiliation:Department of Psychology, New York University, 6 Washington Place, New York, NY 10003-6634, USA
Abstract:Three studies examine the hypothesis that people spontaneously (i.e., unintentionally and without awareness of doing so) infer causes (the Spontaneous Causal Inference, or SCI, hypothesis). Using a cued-recall paradigm, Study 1 examines whether SCIs occur and Study 2 allows for a comparison between implicitly inferred and explicitly mentioned causes. Study 3 examines whether SCIs can be fully explained in terms of spreading activation to general, abstract schemes. It is suggested that STIs (e.g., Winter & Uleman, 1984), and spontaneous predicting inferences (e.g., [McKoon and Ratcliff, 1986a] and [McKoon and Ratcliff, 1986b]), may be better understood in their relation to SCIs.
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