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    The effect of controllability and causality on counterfactual thinking
    with Caren A. Frosch and Suzanne M. Egan
    Thinking and Reasoning 21 (3): 317-340. 2015.
    Previous research on counterfactual thoughts about prevention suggests that people tend to focus on enabling rather than causing events and controllable rather than uncontrollable events. Two experiments explore whether counterfactual thinking about enablers is distinct from counterfactual thinking about controllable events. We presented participants with scenarios in which a cause and an enabler contributed to a negative outcome. We systematically manipulated the controllability of the cause an…Read more