The “Ghost” in the Lab: Believers’ and Non-Believers’ Implicit Responses to an Alleged Apparition

IF 1.7 2区 哲学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY International Journal for the Psychology of Religion Pub Date : 2021-09-28 DOI:10.1080/10508619.2021.1975400
J. Bering, Samantha Smith, A. Stojanov, J. Halberstadt, Ruth Hughes
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

ABSTRACT Many nonbelievers may engage in supernatural thinking despite their statements to the contrary. Using belief in the afterlife as a test case, we examine, across two studies, the possible discrepancy between what people say they believe and how they reason implicitly. In Study 1, participants completed a mindfulness task during which a light went off unexpectedly. Half had previously been told that a ghost had recently been seen in the same room. Participants’ electrodermal responses and heart rate variability suggested implicit attributions to the “ghost,” and these physiological effects were unrelated to afterlife beliefs. In Study 2, compared to those in a control condition, participants who were informed that a ghost had been seen in the laboratory chose to sit further away from the alleged apparition. Surprisingly, this distancing was most pronounced among participants who did not believe in the afterlife. Cumulatively, the data indicate that self-report measures of supernatural belief may not fully capture private experience and implicit reasoning.
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实验室里的“幽灵”:信徒和非信徒对所谓幻影的隐性反应
许多非信徒可能从事超自然思维,尽管他们的声明是相反的。我们以对来世的信仰作为测试案例,通过两项研究来检验人们所说的信仰与他们的隐性推理之间可能存在的差异。在研究1中,参与者完成了一项正念任务,其间一盏灯意外熄灭。一半的人之前被告知最近在同一个房间里看到了鬼魂。参与者的皮肤电反应和心率变异性暗示了对“鬼魂”的隐性归因,而这些生理影响与来世的信仰无关。在研究2中,与对照组相比,被告知在实验室看到鬼魂的参与者选择坐得离所谓的幽灵更远。令人惊讶的是,这种距离在那些不相信来世的参与者中最为明显。累积起来,这些数据表明,超自然信仰的自我报告测量可能无法完全捕获私人经验和内隐推理。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
4.50%
发文量
15
期刊介绍: The International Journal for the Psychology of Religion (IJPR) is devoted to psychological studies of religious processes and phenomena in all religious traditions. This journal provides a means for sustained discussion of psychologically relevant issues that can be examined empirically and concern religion in the most general sense. It presents articles covering a variety of important topics, such as the social psychology of religion, religious development, conversion, religious experience, religion and social attitudes and behavior, religion and mental health, and psychoanalytic and other theoretical interpretations of religion. The journal publishes research reports, brief research reports, commentaries on relevant topical issues, book reviews, and statements addressing articles published in previous issues. The journal may also include a major essay and commentaries, perspective papers of the theory, and articles on the psychology of religion in a specific country.
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