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Color change as a causal agent revisited
MICHAEL E.
YOUNG and OLGA FALMIER
Southern Illinois University at Carbondale
Michotte (1946/1963, p. 235) concluded that color "has no bearing whatever on
the question of qualitative causality." Surprisingly, this claim has received little
empirical investigation in the 60 years since its publication. In 2 experiments, 2
balls struck a cylinder and changed color (either continuously or in a stepped
progression) for 2 s. After the 2-s interval, the cylinder disgorged a purple substance.
Participants chose which of the 2 balls was most likely to have caused the
disgorging effect. An object that changed color was favored as the cause much
more often than one that did not, and participants generally preferred an object
that reached its terminal color immediately before the effect over objects that
reached their terminal colors earlier. When participants performed a causal ratings
task, color change produced moderate judgments of causation, with little
response differentiation as a function of color dynamics.
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