TY - JOUR
T1 - Causal information changes how we reason
T2 - a mixed-methods analysis of decision-making with causal information
AU - Kleinberg, Samantha
AU - Leone, Cristina
AU - Liefgreen, Alice
AU - Lagnado, David A.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2025 Kleinberg, Leone, Liefgreen and Lagnado.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Causal information, from health guidance on diets that prevent disease to financial advice for growing savings, is everywhere. Psychological research has shown that people can readily use causal information to make decisions and choose interventions. However, this work has mainly focused on novel systems rather than everyday domains, such as health and finance. Recent research suggests that in familiar scenarios, causal information can lead to worse decisions than having no information at all, but the mechanism behind this effect is not yet known. We aimed to address this by studying whether people reason differently when they receive causal information and whether the type of reasoning affects decision quality. For a set of decisions about health and personal finance, we used quantitative (e.g., decision accuracy) and qualitative (e.g., free-text descriptions of decision processes) methods to capture decision quality and how people used the provided information. We found that participants given causal information focused on different aspects than did those who did not receive causal information and that reasoning linked to better decisions with no information was associated with worse decisions with causal information. Furthermore, people brought in many aspects of their existing knowledge and preferences, going beyond the conclusions licensed by the provided information. Our findings provide new insights into why decision quality differs systematically between familiar and novel scenarios and suggest directions for future work guiding everyday choices.
AB - Causal information, from health guidance on diets that prevent disease to financial advice for growing savings, is everywhere. Psychological research has shown that people can readily use causal information to make decisions and choose interventions. However, this work has mainly focused on novel systems rather than everyday domains, such as health and finance. Recent research suggests that in familiar scenarios, causal information can lead to worse decisions than having no information at all, but the mechanism behind this effect is not yet known. We aimed to address this by studying whether people reason differently when they receive causal information and whether the type of reasoning affects decision quality. For a set of decisions about health and personal finance, we used quantitative (e.g., decision accuracy) and qualitative (e.g., free-text descriptions of decision processes) methods to capture decision quality and how people used the provided information. We found that participants given causal information focused on different aspects than did those who did not receive causal information and that reasoning linked to better decisions with no information was associated with worse decisions with causal information. Furthermore, people brought in many aspects of their existing knowledge and preferences, going beyond the conclusions licensed by the provided information. Our findings provide new insights into why decision quality differs systematically between familiar and novel scenarios and suggest directions for future work guiding everyday choices.
KW - beliefs
KW - causal models
KW - decision-making
KW - knowledge
KW - mixed-methods
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105014020817
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105014020817#tab=citedBy
U2 - 10.3389/fcogn.2025.1608842
DO - 10.3389/fcogn.2025.1608842
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105014020817
SN - 2813-4532
VL - 4
JO - Frontiers in Cognition
JF - Frontiers in Cognition
M1 - 1608842
ER -