Replication Rate, Framing, and Format Affect Attitudes and Decisions about Science Claims

A series of five experiments examined how the evaluation of a scientific finding was influenced by information about the number of studies that had successfully replicated the initial finding. The experiments also tested the impact of frame (negative, positive) and numeric format (percentage, natura...

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Main Authors: Ralph M. Barnes, Stephanie Tobin, Heather Johnston, Noah MacKenzie, Chelsea Taglang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2016-11-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01826/full
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spelling doaj-30e1787d2599446eaab2437c2c6b97102020-11-25T01:07:44ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782016-11-01710.3389/fpsyg.2016.01826218703Replication Rate, Framing, and Format Affect Attitudes and Decisions about Science ClaimsRalph M. Barnes0Stephanie Tobin1Heather Johnston2Noah MacKenzie3Chelsea Taglang4Montana State UniversityAustralian Catholic UniversityColumbus State Community CollegeClermont College, University of CincinnatiHood CollegeA series of five experiments examined how the evaluation of a scientific finding was influenced by information about the number of studies that had successfully replicated the initial finding. The experiments also tested the impact of frame (negative, positive) and numeric format (percentage, natural frequency) on the evaluation of scientific findings. In Experiments 1 through 4, an attitude difference score served as the dependent measure, while a measure of choice served as the dependent measure in Experiment 5. Results from a diverse sample of 188 non-institutionalized U.S. adults (Experiment 2) and 730 undergraduate college students (Experiments 1, 3, and 4) indicated that attitudes became more positive as the replication rate increased and attitudes were more positive when the replication information was framed positively. The results also indicate that the manner in which replication rate was framed had a greater impact on attitude than the replication rate itself. The large effect for frame was attenuated somewhat when information about replication was presented in the form of natural frequencies rather than percentages. A fifth study employing 662 undergraduate college students in a task in which choice served as the dependent measure confirmed the framing effect and replicated the replication rate effect in the positive frame condition, but provided no evidence that the use of natural frequencies diminished the effect.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01826/fullframingreplicationnatural frequenciespublic perception of scienceRepresentation of informationProbability judgments
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ralph M. Barnes
Stephanie Tobin
Heather Johnston
Noah MacKenzie
Chelsea Taglang
spellingShingle Ralph M. Barnes
Stephanie Tobin
Heather Johnston
Noah MacKenzie
Chelsea Taglang
Replication Rate, Framing, and Format Affect Attitudes and Decisions about Science Claims
Frontiers in Psychology
framing
replication
natural frequencies
public perception of science
Representation of information
Probability judgments
author_facet Ralph M. Barnes
Stephanie Tobin
Heather Johnston
Noah MacKenzie
Chelsea Taglang
author_sort Ralph M. Barnes
title Replication Rate, Framing, and Format Affect Attitudes and Decisions about Science Claims
title_short Replication Rate, Framing, and Format Affect Attitudes and Decisions about Science Claims
title_full Replication Rate, Framing, and Format Affect Attitudes and Decisions about Science Claims
title_fullStr Replication Rate, Framing, and Format Affect Attitudes and Decisions about Science Claims
title_full_unstemmed Replication Rate, Framing, and Format Affect Attitudes and Decisions about Science Claims
title_sort replication rate, framing, and format affect attitudes and decisions about science claims
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2016-11-01
description A series of five experiments examined how the evaluation of a scientific finding was influenced by information about the number of studies that had successfully replicated the initial finding. The experiments also tested the impact of frame (negative, positive) and numeric format (percentage, natural frequency) on the evaluation of scientific findings. In Experiments 1 through 4, an attitude difference score served as the dependent measure, while a measure of choice served as the dependent measure in Experiment 5. Results from a diverse sample of 188 non-institutionalized U.S. adults (Experiment 2) and 730 undergraduate college students (Experiments 1, 3, and 4) indicated that attitudes became more positive as the replication rate increased and attitudes were more positive when the replication information was framed positively. The results also indicate that the manner in which replication rate was framed had a greater impact on attitude than the replication rate itself. The large effect for frame was attenuated somewhat when information about replication was presented in the form of natural frequencies rather than percentages. A fifth study employing 662 undergraduate college students in a task in which choice served as the dependent measure confirmed the framing effect and replicated the replication rate effect in the positive frame condition, but provided no evidence that the use of natural frequencies diminished the effect.
topic framing
replication
natural frequencies
public perception of science
Representation of information
Probability judgments
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01826/full
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