Individuals Who Believe in the Paranormal Expose Themselves to Biased Information and develop More Causal Illusions than Nonbelievers in the Laboratory

dc.contributor.author
Blanco, Fernando
dc.contributor.author
Barberia, Itxaso
dc.contributor.author
Matute Greño, Helena
dc.date.issued
2016-12-05T17:01:53Z
dc.date.issued
2016-12-05T17:01:53Z
dc.date.issued
2015
dc.date.issued
2016-12-05T17:01:58Z
dc.identifier
1932-6203
dc.identifier
https://hdl.handle.net/2445/104494
dc.identifier
659355
dc.identifier
26177025
dc.description.abstract
In the reasoning literature, paranormal beliefs have been proposed to be linked to two related phenomena: a biased perception of causality and a biased information-sampling strategy (believers tend to test fewer hypotheses and prefer confirmatory information). In parallel, recent contingency learning studies showed that, when two unrelated events coincide frequently, individuals interpret this ambiguous pattern as evidence of a causal relationship. Moreover, the latter studies indicate that sampling more cause-present cases than cause-absent cases strengthens the illusion. If paranormal believers actually exhibit a biased exposure to the available information, they should also show this bias in the contin- gency learning task: they would in fact expose themselves to more cause-present cases than cause-absent trials. Thus, by combining the two traditions, we predicted that believers in the paranormal would be more vulnerable to developing causal illusions in the laboratory than nonbelievers because there is a bias in the information they experience. In this study, we found that paranormal beliefs (measured using a questionnaire) correlated with causal illusions (assessed by using contingency judgments). As expected, this correlation was mediated entirely by the believers' tendency to expose themselves to more cause-present cases. The association between paranormal beliefs, biased exposure to information, and causal illusions was only observed for ambiguous materials (i.e., the noncontingent condition). In contrast, the participants' ability to detect causal relationships which did exist (i.e., the contingent condition) was unaffected by their susceptibility to believe in paranormal phenomena
dc.format
16 p.
dc.format
application/pdf
dc.language
eng
dc.publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
dc.relation
Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0131378
dc.relation
PLoS One, 2015, vol. 10, num. 7, p. e0131378
dc.relation
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0131378
dc.rights
cc-by (c) Blanco, Fernando et al., 2015
dc.rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es
dc.rights
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
dc.source
Articles publicats en revistes (Cognició, Desenvolupament i Psicologia de l'Educació)
dc.subject
Parapsicologia
dc.subject
Al·lucinacions i il·lusions
dc.subject
Parapsychology
dc.subject
Hallucinations and illusions
dc.title
Individuals Who Believe in the Paranormal Expose Themselves to Biased Information and develop More Causal Illusions than Nonbelievers in the Laboratory
dc.type
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
dc.type
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion


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