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Certainty and Singular Causal Judgment

Publication ,  Journal Article
O'Neill, K
August 11, 2021

In this paper, I map out broad aims, challenges, predictions, and implica- tions for the resulting intersection of singular causal judgment and metacognition that I (tentatively) call causal metacognition. First, I will overview research on sin- gular causal judgment, focusing on popular counterfactual theories that provide a formal framework for evaluating dependency relationships, as well as several compet- ing definitions of singular causal strength. Next, I will provide relevant background in the literature on metacognition for perception and decision-making, discussing major computational theories of metacognitive judgments. After covering the small amount of work on uncertainty in causal judgments, I will then argue that although singular causal judgments pose a particular problem for some theories of metacognition, coun- terfactual theories of singular causal judgment already provide testable predictions for confidence in causal judgments and can be extended to account for a wide range of patterns in confidence in singular causal judgments. Finally, I will summarize why we need a study of causal metacognition, and what empirical and theoretical advancements in that field might look like.

Duke Scholars

DOI

Publication Date

August 11, 2021
 

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O’Neill, K. (2021). Certainty and Singular Causal Judgment. https://doi.org/10.31237/osf.io/d697e
O’Neill, Kevin. “Certainty and Singular Causal Judgment,” August 11, 2021. https://doi.org/10.31237/osf.io/d697e.
O’Neill K. Certainty and Singular Causal Judgment. 2021 Aug 11;
O’Neill, Kevin. Certainty and Singular Causal Judgment. Aug. 2021. Crossref, doi:10.31237/osf.io/d697e.
O’Neill K. Certainty and Singular Causal Judgment. 2021 Aug 11;

DOI

Publication Date

August 11, 2021