Zum Hauptinhalt springen
Dekorationsartikel gehören nicht zum Leistungsumfang.
Oxford Handbook of Causal Reasoning
Buch von Michael Waldmann
Sprache: Englisch

257,95 €*

inkl. MwSt.

Versandkostenfrei per Post / DHL

auf Lager, Lieferzeit 1-2 Werktage

Kategorien:
Beschreibung
The Oxford Handbook of Causal Reasoning offers a state-of-the-art review of one of our most central cognitive competencies, which has for a long time been neglected in cognitive psychology. This Handbook provides introductions of competing theories of causal reasoning, and discusses its role in various cognitive functions and domains.
The Oxford Handbook of Causal Reasoning offers a state-of-the-art review of one of our most central cognitive competencies, which has for a long time been neglected in cognitive psychology. This Handbook provides introductions of competing theories of causal reasoning, and discusses its role in various cognitive functions and domains.
Über den Autor
Michael R. Waldmann, PhD, is Professor of Psychology at the University of Göttingen, Germany. He has received the early career research award from the German Society for Psychology, and is a Fellow of APS. Currently he is serving as an associate editor of the Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, and as chair of the Scientific Advisory Board of the Max Planck Institute of Human Development, Berlin. The focus of his research is on higher-level cognitive processes across different species and cultures.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
  • Contents

  • 1. Causal Reasoning: An Introduction

  • Michael R. WaldmannPart I Theories of Causal Cognition

  • 2. Associative Accounts of Causal Cognition

  • Mike E. Le Pelley, Oren Griffiths, and Tom Beesley

  • 3. Rules of Causal Judgment: Mapping Statistical Information Onto Causal Beliefs

  • José C. Perales, Andrés Catena, Antonio Cándido, and Antonio Maldonado

  • 4. The Inferential Reasoning Theory of Causal Learning: Toward a Multi- Process Propositional Account

  • Yannick Boddez, Jan DeHouwer, and Tom Beckers

  • 5. Causal Invariance as an Essential Constraint for Creating a Causal Representation of the World: Generalizing the Invariance of Causal Power

  • Patricia W. Cheng and Hongjing Lu

  • 6. The Acquisition and Use of Causal Structure Knowledge

  • Benjamin Margolin Rottman

  • 7. Formalizing Prior Knowledge in Causal Induction

  • Thomas L. Griffiths

  • 8. Causal Mechanisms

  • Samuel G.B. Johnson and Woo-kyoung Ahn

  • 9. Force Dynamics and Causation

  • Phillip Wolff and Robert Thorstad

  • 10. Mental Models and Causation

  • P.N. Johnson Laird and Sangeet S. Khemlani

  • 11. Pseudocontingencies

  • Klaus Fiedlerand Florian Kutzner

  • 12. Singular Causation

  • David Danks

  • 13. Cognitive Neuroscience of Causal Reasoning

  • Joachim T. Operskalski and Aron K. Barbey

  • Part II: Basic Cognitive Functions

  • 14. Visual Impressions of Causality

  • Peter White

  • 15. Goal-Directed Actions

  • Bernhard Hommel

  • 16. Planning and Control

  • Magda Osman

  • 17. Reinforcement Learning and Causal Models

  • Samuel J. Gershman

  • 18. Causation and the Probability of Causal Conditionals

  • David E. Over

  • 19. Causal Models and Conditional Reasoning

  • Mike Oaksford and Nick Chater

  • 20. Concepts as Causal Models: Categorization

  • Bob Rehder

  • 21. Concepts as Causal Models: Inductions

  • Bob Rehder

  • 22. Causal Explanation

  • Tania Lombrozo and Nadya Vasilyeva

  • 23. Diagnostic Reasoning

  • Björn Meder and Ralf Mayrhofer

  • 24. Inferring Causal Relations by Analogy

  • Keith J. Holyoak and Hee Seung Lee

  • 25. Causal Argument

  • Ulrike Hahn, Roland Bluhm, and Frank Zenker

  • 26. Causality in Decision Making

  • York Hagmayer and Philip M. Fernbach

  • Part III: Domains of Causal Reasoning

  • 27. Intuitive Theories

  • Tobias Gerstenberg and Joshua B. Tenenbaum

  • 28. Space, Time, and Causality

  • Marc J. Buehner

  • 29. Causation in Legal and Moral Reasoning

  • David A. Lagnado and Tobias Gerstenberg

  • 30. The Role of Causal Knowledge in Reasoning About Mental Disorders

  • Woo-kyoung Ahn, Nancy S. Kim, and Matthew S. Lebowitz

  • 31. Causality and Causal Reasoning in Natural Language

  • Torgrim Solstad and Oliver Bott

  • 32. Social Attribution and Explanation

  • Denis Hilton

  • Part IV: Development, Phylogeny, and Culture

  • 33. The Development of Causal Reasoning

  • Paul Muentener and Elizabeth Bonawitz

  • 34. Causal Reasoning in Non-Human Animals

  • Christian Schloegl and Julia Fischer

  • 35. Causal Cognition and Culture

  • Andrea Bender, Sieghard Beller, and Douglas L. Medin

  • Index

Über den Autor
Michael R. Waldmann, PhD, is Professor of Psychology at the University of Göttingen, Germany. He has received the early career research award from the German Society for Psychology, and is a Fellow of APS. Currently he is serving as an associate editor of the Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, and as chair of the Scientific Advisory Board of the Max Planck Institute of Human Development, Berlin. The focus of his research is on higher-level cognitive processes across different species and cultures.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
  • Contents

  • 1. Causal Reasoning: An Introduction

  • Michael R. WaldmannPart I Theories of Causal Cognition

  • 2. Associative Accounts of Causal Cognition

  • Mike E. Le Pelley, Oren Griffiths, and Tom Beesley

  • 3. Rules of Causal Judgment: Mapping Statistical Information Onto Causal Beliefs

  • José C. Perales, Andrés Catena, Antonio Cándido, and Antonio Maldonado

  • 4. The Inferential Reasoning Theory of Causal Learning: Toward a Multi- Process Propositional Account

  • Yannick Boddez, Jan DeHouwer, and Tom Beckers

  • 5. Causal Invariance as an Essential Constraint for Creating a Causal Representation of the World: Generalizing the Invariance of Causal Power

  • Patricia W. Cheng and Hongjing Lu

  • 6. The Acquisition and Use of Causal Structure Knowledge

  • Benjamin Margolin Rottman

  • 7. Formalizing Prior Knowledge in Causal Induction

  • Thomas L. Griffiths

  • 8. Causal Mechanisms

  • Samuel G.B. Johnson and Woo-kyoung Ahn

  • 9. Force Dynamics and Causation

  • Phillip Wolff and Robert Thorstad

  • 10. Mental Models and Causation

  • P.N. Johnson Laird and Sangeet S. Khemlani

  • 11. Pseudocontingencies

  • Klaus Fiedlerand Florian Kutzner

  • 12. Singular Causation

  • David Danks

  • 13. Cognitive Neuroscience of Causal Reasoning

  • Joachim T. Operskalski and Aron K. Barbey

  • Part II: Basic Cognitive Functions

  • 14. Visual Impressions of Causality

  • Peter White

  • 15. Goal-Directed Actions

  • Bernhard Hommel

  • 16. Planning and Control

  • Magda Osman

  • 17. Reinforcement Learning and Causal Models

  • Samuel J. Gershman

  • 18. Causation and the Probability of Causal Conditionals

  • David E. Over

  • 19. Causal Models and Conditional Reasoning

  • Mike Oaksford and Nick Chater

  • 20. Concepts as Causal Models: Categorization

  • Bob Rehder

  • 21. Concepts as Causal Models: Inductions

  • Bob Rehder

  • 22. Causal Explanation

  • Tania Lombrozo and Nadya Vasilyeva

  • 23. Diagnostic Reasoning

  • Björn Meder and Ralf Mayrhofer

  • 24. Inferring Causal Relations by Analogy

  • Keith J. Holyoak and Hee Seung Lee

  • 25. Causal Argument

  • Ulrike Hahn, Roland Bluhm, and Frank Zenker

  • 26. Causality in Decision Making

  • York Hagmayer and Philip M. Fernbach

  • Part III: Domains of Causal Reasoning

  • 27. Intuitive Theories

  • Tobias Gerstenberg and Joshua B. Tenenbaum

  • 28. Space, Time, and Causality

  • Marc J. Buehner

  • 29. Causation in Legal and Moral Reasoning

  • David A. Lagnado and Tobias Gerstenberg

  • 30. The Role of Causal Knowledge in Reasoning About Mental Disorders

  • Woo-kyoung Ahn, Nancy S. Kim, and Matthew S. Lebowitz

  • 31. Causality and Causal Reasoning in Natural Language

  • Torgrim Solstad and Oliver Bott

  • 32. Social Attribution and Explanation

  • Denis Hilton

  • Part IV: Development, Phylogeny, and Culture

  • 33. The Development of Causal Reasoning

  • Paul Muentener and Elizabeth Bonawitz

  • 34. Causal Reasoning in Non-Human Animals

  • Christian Schloegl and Julia Fischer

  • 35. Causal Cognition and Culture

  • Andrea Bender, Sieghard Beller, and Douglas L. Medin

  • Index

Warnhinweis

Ähnliche Produkte

Ähnliche Produkte