Summary information

Study title

Development of Perceptual Causality, 1996-2000

Creator

Schlottmann, A., University College London, Department of Psychology

Study number / PID

4363 (UKDA)

10.5255/UKDA-SN-4363-1 (DOI)

Data access

Restricted

Series

Not available

Abstract

Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.This project concerns the tendency to perceive cause-and-effect in schematic events: If square A moves up to B, which moves away at or before contact, adults see this as A launching B, or as B running from A. Thus they relate minimal perceptual information to complex notions of causality in mechanical or purposeful interactions. Prior research found sensitivity to contact causality in infants. This may provide a perceptual blueprint for early understanding of physical cause. The present project focusses on perception of causality without contact. This could provide a blueprint for early understanding of social/psychological causation - people/animals often interact at a distance because they perceive one another from afar. Three issues are addressed experimentally: (1) Whether preverbal infants see causality in noncontact events or merely spatiotemporal sequences. To assess this, infants' visual attention is measured; one event repeats until attention decreases, then its recovery is measured on exposure to a new event. (2) How older children and adults' verbal judgements map contact and noncontact relations to psychological and physical causality. (3) How this is affected by the objects appearing animate. This work applies a novel approach to the study of children's causal understanding. Results will shed light on the perceptual basis of social cognition.Main Topics:Data file 1 (child study 1) gives the children's causal choices during the main phase of study 1. Data file 2 (child study 2) gives the children's causal choices during the main phase of study 2. Data file 3 (infant study 1) shows the infants' looking times during habituation and test in the main infant study. Data file 4 (infant control study) shows the infants' looking times during habituation and test in the control infant study. Data file 5 (adult causality study) gives participants' ratings of physical and psychological...
Read more

Methodology

Data collection period

01/01/1996 - 01/01/2000

Country

England

Time dimension

Cross-sectional (one-time) study

Analysis unit

Individuals
Subnational

Universe

Infant study: 8- and 10-month-old infants living in Greater London during 1996-2000. Child studies: children between the ages of three and 9 years living in North London during 1996-2000. The adult studies involved subjects of various ages and professions, but subjects were drawn mainly from UCL's student body, and aged between 18 and 24 years, during 1996-2000.

Sampling procedure

Volunteer sample

Kind of data

Text
Numeric

Data collection mode

Psychological measurements

Funding information

Grant number

R000237058

Access

Publisher

UK Data Service

Publication year

2001

Terms of data access

The Data Collection is available to UK Data Service registered users subject to the End User Licence Agreement.

Use of the data requires approval from the data owner or their nominee.

Related publications

  • Hesketh, S., Allen, D., Linderoth, C. and Schlottmann, A. (2002) 'Perceptual Causality in Children', Child Development, 1656–1677