The Preference for Joint Attributions Over Contrast-Factor Attributions in Causal Contrast Situations

A current issue about causal attribution is whether people take simple contrast-factor attributions or complex joint attributions in contrast situations. For example, a stone does not dissolve in water and a piece of salt dissolves in water. That the piece of salt dissolves in water is due to: (A) t...

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Main Authors: Moyun Wang, Mingyi Zhu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-08-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01881/full
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spelling doaj-0ccf411774824db88a3c00e2d0fe5dde2020-11-24T21:46:36ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782019-08-011010.3389/fpsyg.2019.01881454519The Preference for Joint Attributions Over Contrast-Factor Attributions in Causal Contrast SituationsMoyun WangMingyi ZhuA current issue about causal attribution is whether people take simple contrast-factor attributions or complex joint attributions in contrast situations. For example, a stone does not dissolve in water and a piece of salt dissolves in water. That the piece of salt dissolves in water is due to: (A) the influence of the piece of salt; (B) the influence of the water; (C) the joint influence of the piece of salt and the water. We propose a mechanism-based sufficiency account for such questions. It argues that causal attributions are guided by mechanism-based explanatory sufficiency, and people prefer a mechanism-based attribution with explanatory sufficiency. This account predicts the sufficient joint attribution (the C option), whereas the conventional covariation approach predicts the contrast-factor attribution (the A option). Two experiments investigated whether contrast situations affect causal attributions for compound causation with explicit mechanism information and simple causation without explicit mechanism information, respectively. Both experiments found that in both the presence and absence of contrast situations, the majority of participants preferred sufficient joint attributions to simple contrast-factor attributions regardless of whether explicit mechanism information was present, and contrast situations did not affect causal attributions. These findings favor the mechanism-based sufficiency account rather than the covariation approach and the complexity account. In contrast situations, the predominance of joint attributions implies that explanatory complexity affects causal attributions by the modulation of explanatory sufficiency, and people prefer mechanism-based joint attributions that provide sufficient explanations for effects. The present findings are beyond the existing approaches to causal attributions.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01881/fullcausal attributioncontrast situationmechanismjoint attributionexplanatory complexityexplanatory sufficiency
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Moyun Wang
Mingyi Zhu
spellingShingle Moyun Wang
Mingyi Zhu
The Preference for Joint Attributions Over Contrast-Factor Attributions in Causal Contrast Situations
Frontiers in Psychology
causal attribution
contrast situation
mechanism
joint attribution
explanatory complexity
explanatory sufficiency
author_facet Moyun Wang
Mingyi Zhu
author_sort Moyun Wang
title The Preference for Joint Attributions Over Contrast-Factor Attributions in Causal Contrast Situations
title_short The Preference for Joint Attributions Over Contrast-Factor Attributions in Causal Contrast Situations
title_full The Preference for Joint Attributions Over Contrast-Factor Attributions in Causal Contrast Situations
title_fullStr The Preference for Joint Attributions Over Contrast-Factor Attributions in Causal Contrast Situations
title_full_unstemmed The Preference for Joint Attributions Over Contrast-Factor Attributions in Causal Contrast Situations
title_sort preference for joint attributions over contrast-factor attributions in causal contrast situations
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2019-08-01
description A current issue about causal attribution is whether people take simple contrast-factor attributions or complex joint attributions in contrast situations. For example, a stone does not dissolve in water and a piece of salt dissolves in water. That the piece of salt dissolves in water is due to: (A) the influence of the piece of salt; (B) the influence of the water; (C) the joint influence of the piece of salt and the water. We propose a mechanism-based sufficiency account for such questions. It argues that causal attributions are guided by mechanism-based explanatory sufficiency, and people prefer a mechanism-based attribution with explanatory sufficiency. This account predicts the sufficient joint attribution (the C option), whereas the conventional covariation approach predicts the contrast-factor attribution (the A option). Two experiments investigated whether contrast situations affect causal attributions for compound causation with explicit mechanism information and simple causation without explicit mechanism information, respectively. Both experiments found that in both the presence and absence of contrast situations, the majority of participants preferred sufficient joint attributions to simple contrast-factor attributions regardless of whether explicit mechanism information was present, and contrast situations did not affect causal attributions. These findings favor the mechanism-based sufficiency account rather than the covariation approach and the complexity account. In contrast situations, the predominance of joint attributions implies that explanatory complexity affects causal attributions by the modulation of explanatory sufficiency, and people prefer mechanism-based joint attributions that provide sufficient explanations for effects. The present findings are beyond the existing approaches to causal attributions.
topic causal attribution
contrast situation
mechanism
joint attribution
explanatory complexity
explanatory sufficiency
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01881/full
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