Experimental Manipulations of Personal Control do Not Increase Illusory Pattern Perception

We report seven experiments to investigate the effects of control threat manipulations on different measures of illusory pattern perception: magical thinking (Study 1–3), conspiracy beliefs (Study 4), paranormal beliefs (Study 5) and agent detection (Study 6 and 7). Overall we did not find evidence...

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Main Authors: Michiel van Elk, Paul Lodder
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of California Press 2018-06-01
Series:Collabra: Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.collabra.org/articles/155
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spelling doaj-336004197f9947a693f97527aea179ea2020-11-24T23:55:56ZengUniversity of California PressCollabra: Psychology2474-73942018-06-014110.1525/collabra.15587Experimental Manipulations of Personal Control do Not Increase Illusory Pattern PerceptionMichiel van Elk0Paul Lodder1Department of Psychology; Amsterdam Brain and Cognition Center, University of Amsterdam, AmsterdamDepartment of Methodology and Statistics, Tilburg University, TilburgWe report seven experiments to investigate the effects of control threat manipulations on different measures of illusory pattern perception: magical thinking (Study 1–3), conspiracy beliefs (Study 4), paranormal beliefs (Study 5) and agent detection (Study 6 and 7). Overall we did not find evidence for an effect of control threat on any of our relevant dependent measures. By using Bayesian analyses we obtained positive evidence for the null-hypothesis that an experimentally induced loss of control does not affect illusory pattern perception. Finally, by re-conducting a recent meta-analysis we found strong evidence for publication bias and a relatively small effect size for control-threat manipulations. Together, these results cast doubt on the potential efficacy of experimental autobiographical recall manipulations to manipulate feelings of control.https://www.collabra.org/articles/155Compensatory ControlFeeling of ControlIllusory Pattern PerceptionContingency LearningMagical ThinkingParanormal BeliefsConspiracy Beliefs
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michiel van Elk
Paul Lodder
spellingShingle Michiel van Elk
Paul Lodder
Experimental Manipulations of Personal Control do Not Increase Illusory Pattern Perception
Collabra: Psychology
Compensatory Control
Feeling of Control
Illusory Pattern Perception
Contingency Learning
Magical Thinking
Paranormal Beliefs
Conspiracy Beliefs
author_facet Michiel van Elk
Paul Lodder
author_sort Michiel van Elk
title Experimental Manipulations of Personal Control do Not Increase Illusory Pattern Perception
title_short Experimental Manipulations of Personal Control do Not Increase Illusory Pattern Perception
title_full Experimental Manipulations of Personal Control do Not Increase Illusory Pattern Perception
title_fullStr Experimental Manipulations of Personal Control do Not Increase Illusory Pattern Perception
title_full_unstemmed Experimental Manipulations of Personal Control do Not Increase Illusory Pattern Perception
title_sort experimental manipulations of personal control do not increase illusory pattern perception
publisher University of California Press
series Collabra: Psychology
issn 2474-7394
publishDate 2018-06-01
description We report seven experiments to investigate the effects of control threat manipulations on different measures of illusory pattern perception: magical thinking (Study 1–3), conspiracy beliefs (Study 4), paranormal beliefs (Study 5) and agent detection (Study 6 and 7). Overall we did not find evidence for an effect of control threat on any of our relevant dependent measures. By using Bayesian analyses we obtained positive evidence for the null-hypothesis that an experimentally induced loss of control does not affect illusory pattern perception. Finally, by re-conducting a recent meta-analysis we found strong evidence for publication bias and a relatively small effect size for control-threat manipulations. Together, these results cast doubt on the potential efficacy of experimental autobiographical recall manipulations to manipulate feelings of control.
topic Compensatory Control
Feeling of Control
Illusory Pattern Perception
Contingency Learning
Magical Thinking
Paranormal Beliefs
Conspiracy Beliefs
url https://www.collabra.org/articles/155
work_keys_str_mv AT michielvanelk experimentalmanipulationsofpersonalcontroldonotincreaseillusorypatternperception
AT paullodder experimentalmanipulationsofpersonalcontroldonotincreaseillusorypatternperception
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