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  1. Counterfactual thoughts in complex causal domain: content, benefits, and implications for their function.Alessandro Bogani, Katya Tentori, Donatella Ferrante & Stefania Pighin - 2024 - Thinking and Reasoning 30 (4):612-647.
    The reliability of previous findings on two crucial aspects of counterfactual thinking, namely the content of counterfactual modifications and their impact on future performance, has been questioned for the frequent use of tasks characterised by simple causal domains, that restrict participants’ possibility to consider a broad range of modifications. To overcome this limitation, we utilised a new experimental task featuring a complex causal domain to investigate such key aspects. The results indicated that participants tend to generate counterfactuals about elements outside (...)
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  • Should I have been more careful or less careless? The comparative nature of counterfactual thoughts alters judgments of their impact.Karl-Andrew Woltin & Kai Epstude - 2023 - Cognition 235 (C):105402.
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  • Episodic representation: A mental models account.Nikola Andonovski - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13:899371.
    This paper offers a modeling account of episodic representation. I argue that the episodic system constructsmental models: representations that preserve the spatiotemporal structure of represented domains. In prototypical cases, these domains are events: occurrences taken by subjects to have characteristic structures, dynamics and relatively determinate beginnings and ends. Due to their simplicity and manipulability, mental event models can be used in a variety of cognitive contexts: in remembering the personal past, but also in future-oriented and counterfactual imagination. As structural representations, (...)
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