Judging interevent relations: From cause to effect and from effect to cause
- 1 November 1993
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Memory & Cognition
- Vol. 21 (6) , 802-808
- https://doi.org/10.3758/bf03202747
Abstract
Stimulus competition was studied in college students' correlational judgments in a medical decision-making setting. In accord with prior findings, subjects making cause-to-effect (predictive) judgments discounted a stimulus event that was moderately correlated with a target event when rival stimuli were more highly correlated with the effect. However, subjects making effect-to-cause (diagnostic) judgments were not at all disposed to discount a stimulus event which was moderately correlated with a target event when rival stimuli were more highly correlated with the cause. The theoretical implications of these results are considered in connection with associative and mentalistic models of causal attribution.Keywords
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