In audio-visual synchrony perception, perceptual tolerance for relative delays is asymmetric, with greater tolerance found when the auditory component trails rather than leads the visual component. In synchronous-successive judgment paradigms, the curve indicating the proportion of "synchronous" responses is thus not symmetric around physical synchrony, but centers around a certain positive delay (audio following video), called the point of subjective simultaneity (PSS). Here we report an investigation of whether the causal interpretation of the audio-visual event by the observer influences synchrony perception. We estimated the PSS for an animation of Newton’s Cradle, showing a left-to-right pendulum movement, with three visual conditions:...