This study investigated the development of young children's causal inference by studying variability in behavior. Two possible sources of variability, strategy use and accuracy in strategy execution, were discriminated and related to age. To this end, a relatively wide range of causal inference trials was administered to children of a relatively broad age range: 2- to 5-year-olds. Subsequently, individuals' response patterns over trials were analyzed with a latent variable technique. The results showed that variability in children's behavior could largely be explained by strategy use. Three different strategies were distinguished, and tentative interpretations suggest these could possibly be labeled as "rational", "associative", and "uncert...
The present study examined developmental differences in the use of distinctive-ness, consensus, and ...
How do young children learn about causal structure in an uncertain and variable world? We tested whe...
Previous work has demonstrated the importance of both naïve theories and statistical evidence to chi...
This study investigated the development of young children’s causal inference by studying variability...
<div>This study investigated the development of young children’s causal inference by studying variab...
In previous studies, causal contingencies have been suggested to play an important role in causality...
Three studies investigated whether young children make accurate causal inferences on the basis of pa...
Previous research has suggested that preschoolers possess a cognitive system that allows them to con...
AbstractChildren between 5 and 8years of age freely intervened on a three-variable causal system, wi...
We examine the interaction of two cues that children use to make judgments about cause-effect relati...
Learning to generalize from instances is an important part of the development of inductive reasoning...
This series of studies examines the relationship between causal inference and attribution from a dev...
Strategic games require to reason about other peoples and one’s own beliefs or intentions. Although ...
Previous work has demonstrated the importance of both naïve theories and statistical evidence to chi...
Children aged between 5 and 8 years freely intervened on a three-variable causal system, with their ...
The present study examined developmental differences in the use of distinctive-ness, consensus, and ...
How do young children learn about causal structure in an uncertain and variable world? We tested whe...
Previous work has demonstrated the importance of both naïve theories and statistical evidence to chi...
This study investigated the development of young children’s causal inference by studying variability...
<div>This study investigated the development of young children’s causal inference by studying variab...
In previous studies, causal contingencies have been suggested to play an important role in causality...
Three studies investigated whether young children make accurate causal inferences on the basis of pa...
Previous research has suggested that preschoolers possess a cognitive system that allows them to con...
AbstractChildren between 5 and 8years of age freely intervened on a three-variable causal system, wi...
We examine the interaction of two cues that children use to make judgments about cause-effect relati...
Learning to generalize from instances is an important part of the development of inductive reasoning...
This series of studies examines the relationship between causal inference and attribution from a dev...
Strategic games require to reason about other peoples and one’s own beliefs or intentions. Although ...
Previous work has demonstrated the importance of both naïve theories and statistical evidence to chi...
Children aged between 5 and 8 years freely intervened on a three-variable causal system, with their ...
The present study examined developmental differences in the use of distinctive-ness, consensus, and ...
How do young children learn about causal structure in an uncertain and variable world? We tested whe...
Previous work has demonstrated the importance of both naïve theories and statistical evidence to chi...