Counterfactual thinking and ascriptions of cause and preventability

被引:148
作者
Mandel, DR [1 ]
Lehman, DR [1 ]
机构
[1] UNIV BRITISH COLUMBIA, DEPT PSYCHOL, VANCOUVER, BC, CANADA
关键词
D O I
10.1037/0022-3514.71.3.450
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Research suggests that counterfactuals (i.e., thoughts of how things might have been different) play an important role in determining the perceived cause of a target outcome. Results from 3 scenario studies indicate that counterfactual content overlapped primarily with thoughts of how an outcome might have been prevented (preventability ascriptions) rather than with thoughts of how it might have been caused (causal ascriptions). Counterfactuals and preventability ascriptions focused mainly on controllable antecedents, whereas causal ascriptions focused mainly on antecedents that covaried with the target outcome over a focal set of instances. Contrary to current theorizing, causal ascriptions were unrelated to counterfactual content (Study 3). Results indicate that the primary criterion used to recruit causal ascriptions (covariation) differs from that used to recruit counterfactuals (controllability).
引用
收藏
页码:450 / 463
页数:14
相关论文
共 73 条
[41]  
MANDEL DR, 1995, UNPUB POSTEXPERIMENT
[42]   THE IMPACT OF PERCEIVED CONTROL ON THE IMAGINATION OF BETTER AND WORSE POSSIBLE WORLDS [J].
MARKMAN, KD ;
GAVANSKI, I ;
SHERMAN, SJ ;
MCMULLEN, MN .
PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY BULLETIN, 1995, 21 (06) :588-595
[43]   THE MENTAL SIMULATION OF BETTER AND WORSE POSSIBLE WORLDS [J].
MARKMAN, KD ;
GAVANSKI, I ;
SHERMAN, SJ ;
MCMULLEN, MN .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1993, 29 (01) :87-109
[45]  
MCGILL AL, 1993, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V64, P897
[46]   CONTEXT EFFECTS IN JUDGMENTS OF CAUSATION [J].
MCGILL, AL .
JOURNAL OF PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1989, 57 (02) :189-200
[47]  
MCGILL AL, 1995, WHAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN, P333
[48]  
Mill J. S., 1843, SYSTEM LOGIC
[49]  
MILLS JS, 1973, COLLECTED WORKS JS M, V8
[50]   THE PSYCHOLOGY OF INTERPERSONAL-RELATIONS - HEIDER,F [J].
NEWCOMB, T .
AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW, 1958, 23 (06) :742-743