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The Einstein effect: Global evidence for scientific source credibility effects and the influence of religiosity
| Content Provider | PsyArXiv |
|---|---|
| Author | Hoogeveen, Suzanne Haaf, Julia M. Bulbulia, Joseph Ross, Robert M McKay, Ryan Altay, Sacha Bendixen, Theiss Berniƫnas, Renatas Cheshin, Arik Gentili, Claudio |
| Description | People tend to evaluate information from reliable sources more favourably, but it is unclear exactly how perceivers' worldviews interact with this source credibility effect. In a large and diverse cross-cultural sample (N = 10,195 from 24 countries), we presented participants with obscure, meaningless statements attributed to either a spiritual guru or a scientist. We found a robust global source credibility effect for scientific authorities, which we dub `the Einstein effect': across all 24 countries scientists hold greater authority than spiritual source, even among highly committed religious people, who are relatively also more credulous of nonsense from scientists than they are of nonsense from spiritual gurus. Additionally, individual religiosity predicted a weaker relative preference for the statement from the scientist vs. the spiritual guru, and was more strongly associated with credibility judgments for the guru than the scientist. Independent data on explicit trust ratings across 143 countries mirrored the experimental patterns. These findings suggest that irrespective of religious worldview, science is a powerful and universal heuristic that signals the reliability of information. |
| DOI | 10.31234/osf.io/sf8ez |
| Language | English |
| Publisher Date | 2020-12-01 |
| Access Restriction | Open |
| Rights License | CC-By Attribution 4.0 International |
| Subject Keyword | Social and Behavioral Sciences;Social and Personality Psychology;Religion and Spirituality;Attitudes and Persuasion;Cultural Psychology;Cross-cultural Psychology Culture Religion Science Beliefs Source Credibility Spirituality |
| Content Type | Text |
| Resource Type | Preprint |
| Subject | Social Sciences Social Psychology Developmental and Educational Psychology Psychology |