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Dissociating Processes Supporting Causal Perception and Causal Inference in the Brain.
Authors:Roser  Matthew E; Fugelsang  Jonathan A; Dunbar  Kevin N; Corballis  Paul M; Gazzaniga  Michael S
Abstract:An understanding of relations between causes and effects is essential for making sense of the dynamic physical world. It has been argued that this understanding of causality depends on both perceptual and inferential components. To investigate whether causal perception and causal inference rely on common or on distinct processes, the authors tested 2 callosotomy (split-brain) patients and a group of neurologically intact participants. The authors show that the direct perception of causality and the ability to infer causality depend on different hemispheres of the divided brain. This finding implies that understanding causality is not a unitary process and that causal perception and causal inference can proceed independently. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)
Keywords:causality  callosotomy  split-brain  cerebral asymmetry  causal inference  causal perception  inferential components  direct perception  dissociating processes
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