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Explaining Constrains Causal Learning in Childhood
Authors:Caren M. Walker  Tania Lombrozo  Joseph J. Williams  Anna N. Rafferty  Alison Gopnik
Affiliation:1. University of California, San Diego;2. University of California, Berkeley;3. Harvard University;4. Carleton College
Abstract:Three experiments investigate how self‐generated explanation influences children's causal learning. Five‐year‐olds (= 114) observed data consistent with two hypotheses and were prompted to explain or to report each observation. In Study 1, when making novel generalizations, explainers were more likely to favor the hypothesis that accounted for more observations. In Study 2, explainers favored a hypothesis that was consistent with prior knowledge. Study 3 pitted a hypothesis that accounted for more observations against a hypothesis consistent with prior knowledge. Explainers were more likely to base generalizations on prior knowledge. Findings suggest that attempts to explain drive children to evaluate hypotheses using features of “good” explanations, or those supporting generalizations with broad scope, as informed by children's prior knowledge and observations.
Keywords:
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