The Spontaneous Counterfactual Inference Task: Misremembering What Might Have Been

Author:

Smallman Rachel1ORCID,Summerville Amy23ORCID,Lowe Jessica C.1

Affiliation:

1. Texas A&M University, College Station, USA

2. Kairos Research, Dayton, OH, USA

3. Miami University, Oxford, OH, USA

Abstract

Counterfactuals, thoughts about “what might have been,” play an important role in causal judgment, emotion, and motivation, and spontaneously arise during daily life. However, current methods to measure spontaneous counterfactual thinking are cumbersome and subjective. The current research adapts a paradigm from the Spontaneous Trait Inference literature to develop the Spontaneous Counterfactual Inference measure (SCFI), which uses false recognition of counterfactual statements as a measure of spontaneous counterfactual thought. Studies 1a and 1b demonstrate that the SCFI is sensitive to precursors of counterfactual thinking: norm violation and counterfactual closeness. Study 2 demonstrates that the SCFI converges with the generation of counterfactual statements in an open-ended writing task. The SCFI also predicts two important consequences of counterfactual thought, blame (Study 3), and intention endorsement (Study 4). The SCFI thus offers a new tool for researchers interested in counterfactual thinking.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Social Psychology

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