Why it happened and how it could have been different : a comparison of causal and counterfactual thinking
Citation:
Alice McEleney, 'Why it happened and how it could have been different : a comparison of causal and counterfactual thinking', [thesis], Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). School of Psychology, 2000, pp 291Download Item:
Abstract:
The aim of this thesis was to compare two pervasive forms of human thinking : causal thinking about why an outcome happened (e.g., "I failed because I didn’t try") and counterfactual thinking about how an outcome could have been different (e.g., "I wouldn’t have failed if I had tried"). We report nine experiments designed to test the hypothesis that causal thoughts are concerned with the prediction of outcomes, whereas counterfactual thoughts are concerned with their prevention.
Author: McEleney, Alice
Advisor:
Byrne,RuthPublisher:
Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland). School of PsychologyNote:
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