•  157
    A Theory of Causal Learning in Children: Causal Maps and Bayes Nets
    with Alison Gopnik, Clark Glymour, Laura Schulz, and David Danks
    Psychological Review 111 (1): 3-32. 2004.
    We propose that children employ specialized cognitive systems that allow them to recover an accurate “causal map” of the world: an abstract, coherent, learned representation of the causal relations among events. This kind of knowledge can be perspicuously understood in terms of the formalism of directed graphical causal models, or “Bayes nets”. Children’s causal learning and inference may involve computations similar to those for learning causal Bayes nets and for predicting with them. Experimen…Read more
  •  62
    A Comparison of American and Nepalese Children's Concepts of Freedom of Choice and Social Constraint
    with Nadia Chernyak, Katherine M. Sullivan, and Qi Wang
    Cognitive Science 37 (7): 1343-1355. 2013.
    Recent work has shown that preschool-aged children and adults understand freedom of choice regardless of culture, but that adults across cultures differ in perceiving social obligations as constraints on action. To investigate the development of these cultural differences and universalities, we interviewed school-aged children (4–11) in Nepal and the United States regarding beliefs about people's freedom of choice and constraint to follow preferences, perform impossible acts, and break social ob…Read more
  •  29
    Young Children's Help‐Seeking as Active Information Gathering
    with Christopher Vredenburgh
    Cognitive Science 40 (3): 697-722. 2016.
    Young children's social learning is a topic of great interest. Here, we examined preschoolers’ help-seeking as a social information gathering activity that may optimize and support children's opportunities for learning. In a toy assembly task, we assessed each child's competency at assembling toys and the difficulty of each step of the task. We hypothesized that children's help-seeking would be a function of both initial competency and task difficulty. The results confirmed this prediction; all …Read more
  •  16
    Rational learners and parochial norms
    with Scott Partington and Shaun Nichols
    Cognition 233 (C): 105366. 2023.
  •  23
    The idea of treating robots as free agents seems only to have existed in the realm of science fiction. In our current world, however, children are interacting with robotic technologies that look, talk, and act like agents. Are children willing to treat such technologies as agents with thoughts, feelings, experiences, and even free will? In this paper, we explore whether children’s developing concepts of agency and free will apply to robots. We first review the literature on children’s agency and…Read more
  •  48
  •  40
    The developmental and cultural psychology of free will
    Philosophy Compass 13 (11). 2018.
    This paper provides an account of the developmental origins of our belief in free will based on research from a range of ages—infants, preschoolers, older children, and adults—and across cultures. The foundations of free will beliefs are in infants' understanding of intentional action—their ability to use context to infer when agents are free to “do otherwise” and when they are constrained. In early childhood, new knowledge about causes of action leads to new abilities to imagine constraints on …Read more
  •  65
    Developing intuitions about free will between ages four and six
    with Alison Gopnik, Nadia Chernyak, Elizabeth Seiver, and Henry M. Wellman
    Cognition 138 (C): 79-101. 2015.
  •  44
    Understanding the adult moralist requires first understanding the child scientist
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 33 (4): 343-344. 2010.
    Children learn from people and about people simultaneously; that is, children consider evidentiary qualities of human actions which cross traditional domain boundaries. We propose that Knobe's moral asymmetries are a natural consequence of this learning process: the way gather evidence for causation, intention, and morality through early social experiences
  •  38
    When Choices Are Not Personal: The Effect of Statistical and Social Cues on Children's Inferences About the Scope of Preferences
    with Gil Diesendruck, Shira Salzer, and Fei Xu
    Journal of Cognition and Development 16 (2): 370-380. 2015.
    Individual choices are commonly taken to manifest personal preferences. The present study investigated whether social and statistical cues influence young children's inferences about the generalizability of preferences. Preschoolers were exposed to either 1 or 2 demonstrators’ selections of objects. The selected objects constituted 18%, 50%, or 100% of all available objects. We found that children took a single demonstrator's choices as indicative only of his or her personal preference. However,…Read more
  •  34
    Culture moderates the relationship between self-control ability and free will beliefs in childhood
    with Xin Zhao, Adrienne Wente, María Fernández Flecha, Denise Segovia Galvan, and Alison Gopnik
    Cognition 210 (C): 104609. 2021.
    We investigate individual, developmental, and cultural differences in self-control in relation to children's changing belief in “free will” – the possibility of acting against and inhibiting strong desires. In three studies, 4- to 8-year-olds in the U.S., China, Singapore, and Peru (N = 441) answered questions to gauge their belief in free will and completed a series of self-control and inhibitory control tasks. Children across all four cultures showed predictable age-related improvements in sel…Read more
  •  49
    Inferring Hidden Causal Structure
    with Alison Gopnik, Chris Lucas, and Laura Schulz
    Cognitive Science 34 (1): 148-160. 2010.
    We used a new method to assess how people can infer unobserved causal structure from patterns of observed events. Participants were taught to draw causal graphs, and then shown a pattern of associations and interventions on a novel causal system. Given minimal training and no feedback, participants in Experiment 1 used causal graph notation to spontaneously draw structures containing one observed cause, one unobserved common cause, and two unobserved independent causes, depending on the pattern …Read more
  •  15
    Development links psychological causes to evolutionary explanations
    with Mark Fedyk
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 37 (2): 142-143. 2014.
    Our conscious abilities are learned in environments that have evolved to support them. This insight provides an alternative way of framing Huang & Bargh's provocative hypothesis. To understand the conflict between unconscious goals and consciousness, we can study the emergence of conscious thought and control in childhood. These developmental processes are also central to the best available current evolutionary theories.