This study examines if the blocking effect paradigm predicts causal judgments when consequences of events vary in valence and magnitude. The procedure consists on presenting participants with reports describing the positive or negative effects produced by different substances, when these are consumed either separately or simultaneously with others. Two groups of participants were exposed to high and low magnitude consequences, respectively. The extent to which behavior with respect to causal judgments is consistent with the predictions of the blocking effect was evaluated in in both groups using two types of questions. One of them asked whether or not substance X produced the effect, while the other one asked about the probability of substa...
In two experiments participants judged the extent to which occurrences and non-occurrences of an eff...
Three experiments sought to develop the suggestion that, under some circumstances, common associativ...
Bohner G, Bless H, Schwarz N, Strack F. What triggers causal attributions? The impact of valence and...
This study examines if the blocking effect paradigm predicts causal judgments when consequences of e...
"Blocking" refers to judgments of a moderate contingency being lowered when contrasted with a strong...
Additivity-related assumptions have been proven to modulate blocking in human causal learning. Typic...
According to the causal powers theory, all causal relations are understood in terms of causal powers...
Many theories of contingency learning assume (either explicitly or implicitly) that predicting wheth...
In four experiments, the predictions made by causal model theory and the Rescorla-Wagner model were ...
Participants saw a series of situations in which a cue (a light appearing at a certain position) cou...
This study compared the occurrence of the blocking effect when participants had unlimited and limite...
Several theories of associative learning propose that blocking reflects changes in the processing de...
In judging the extent to which a cue causes an outcome, judgement can be affected by information abo...
A sample of 99 children completed a causal learning task that was an analogue of the food allergy pa...
In causal reasoning the presence of a strong predictor of an outcome interferes with causal judgment...
In two experiments participants judged the extent to which occurrences and non-occurrences of an eff...
Three experiments sought to develop the suggestion that, under some circumstances, common associativ...
Bohner G, Bless H, Schwarz N, Strack F. What triggers causal attributions? The impact of valence and...
This study examines if the blocking effect paradigm predicts causal judgments when consequences of e...
"Blocking" refers to judgments of a moderate contingency being lowered when contrasted with a strong...
Additivity-related assumptions have been proven to modulate blocking in human causal learning. Typic...
According to the causal powers theory, all causal relations are understood in terms of causal powers...
Many theories of contingency learning assume (either explicitly or implicitly) that predicting wheth...
In four experiments, the predictions made by causal model theory and the Rescorla-Wagner model were ...
Participants saw a series of situations in which a cue (a light appearing at a certain position) cou...
This study compared the occurrence of the blocking effect when participants had unlimited and limite...
Several theories of associative learning propose that blocking reflects changes in the processing de...
In judging the extent to which a cue causes an outcome, judgement can be affected by information abo...
A sample of 99 children completed a causal learning task that was an analogue of the food allergy pa...
In causal reasoning the presence of a strong predictor of an outcome interferes with causal judgment...
In two experiments participants judged the extent to which occurrences and non-occurrences of an eff...
Three experiments sought to develop the suggestion that, under some circumstances, common associativ...
Bohner G, Bless H, Schwarz N, Strack F. What triggers causal attributions? The impact of valence and...