Giving the giggles: Prediction, intervention, and young children's representation of psychological events

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Abstract

Adults recognize that if event A predicts event B, intervening on A might generate B. Research suggests that young children have difficulty making this inference unless the events are initiated by goal-directed actions [1]. The current study tested the domain-generality and development of this phenomenon. Replicating previous work, when the events involved a physical outcome, toddlers (mean: 24 months) failed to generalize the outcome of spontaneously occurring predictive events to their own interventions; toddlers did generalize from prediction to intervention when the events involved a psychological outcome. We discuss these findings as they bear on the development of causal concepts. © 2012 Muentener et al.

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Muentener, P., Friel, D., & Schulz, L. (2012). Giving the giggles: Prediction, intervention, and young children’s representation of psychological events. PLoS ONE, 7(8). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0042495

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