Biology, Society, or Choice: How Do Non-Experts Interpret Explanations of Behaviour?

Q1 Social Sciences Open Mind Pub Date : 2023-08-20 eCollection Date: 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1162/opmi_a_00098
Daniel Nettle, Willem E Frankenhuis, Karthik Panchanathan
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Abstract

Explanations for human behaviour can be framed in many different ways, from the social-structural context to the individual motivation down to the neurobiological implementation. We know comparatively little about how people interpret these explanatory framings, and what they infer when one kind of explanation rather than another is made salient. In four experiments, UK general-population volunteers read vignettes describing the same behaviour, but providing explanations framed in different ways. In Study 1, we found that participants grouped explanations into 'biological', 'psychological' and 'sociocultural' clusters. Explanations with different framings were often seen as incompatible with one another, especially when one belonged to the 'biological' cluster and the other did not. In Study 2, we found that exposure to a particular explanatory framing triggered inferences beyond the information given. Specifically, psychological explanations led participants to assume the behaviour was malleable, and biological framings led them to assume it was not. In Studies 3A and 3B, we found that the choice of explanatory framing can affect people's assumptions about effective interventions. For example, presenting a biological explanation increased people's conviction that interventions like drugs would be effective, and decreased their conviction that psychological or socio-political interventions would be effective. These results illuminate the intuitive psychology of explanations, and also potential pitfalls in scientific communication. Framing an explanation in a particular way will often generate inferences in the audience-about what other factors are not causally important, how easy it is to change the behaviour, and what kinds of remedies are worth considering-that the communicator may not have anticipated and might not intend.

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生物学、社会或选择:非专家如何解释行为的解释?
对人类行为的解释可以用很多不同的方式来构建,从社会结构背景到个人动机,再到神经生物学实施。我们对人们如何解释这些解释框架,以及当一种解释而不是另一种解释变得突出时,他们会推断出什么,知之甚少。在四个实验中,英国普通人群志愿者阅读了描述相同行为的小插曲,但提供了以不同方式构建的解释。在研究1中,我们发现参与者将解释分为“生物学”、“心理学”和“社会文化”三类。不同框架的解释通常被视为彼此不兼容,尤其是当一个属于“生物”集群,而另一个不属于时。在研究2中,我们发现暴露于特定的解释框架会引发超出给定信息的推断。具体来说,心理解释导致参与者认为这种行为是可塑的,而生物学框架导致他们认为它不是。在研究3A和3B中,我们发现解释性框架的选择会影响人们对有效干预的假设。例如,提出生物学解释增加了人们对药物等干预措施有效的信念,并降低了他们对心理或社会政治干预措施有效性的信念。这些结果阐明了解释的直观心理,也揭示了科学交流中潜在的陷阱。以特定的方式进行解释通常会在观众中产生以下推论:哪些其他因素对因果关系不重要,改变行为有多容易,以及哪些补救措施值得考虑,而沟通者可能没有预料到,也可能没有打算。
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来源期刊
Open Mind
Open Mind Social Sciences-Linguistics and Language
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
15
审稿时长
53 weeks
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