The Differential Effects of Good Luck Belief on Cognitive Performance in Boys and Girls

There is evidence that inducing a luck-related superstition leads to better performance on a variety of motor dexterity and cognitive tasks. However, some replication efforts have failed to succeed. At the same time, our previous findings suggest that the effect of good luck belief on cognitive perf...

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Main Author: Lenka Kostovičová
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PsychOpen 2019-02-01
Series:Europe's Journal of Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ejop.psychopen.eu/article/view/1697
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spelling doaj-fd9ad8ef89c3446c9db22d2262ee52cf2020-11-25T03:42:59ZengPsychOpenEurope's Journal of Psychology1841-04132019-02-0115110811910.5964/ejop.v15i1.1697ejop.v15i1.1697The Differential Effects of Good Luck Belief on Cognitive Performance in Boys and GirlsLenka Kostovičová0Institute of Applied Psychology, Faculty of Social and Economic Sciences, Comenius University, Bratislava, SlovakiaThere is evidence that inducing a luck-related superstition leads to better performance on a variety of motor dexterity and cognitive tasks. However, some replication efforts have failed to succeed. At the same time, our previous findings suggest that the effect of good luck belief on cognitive performance interacts with gender. The present research aimed at replicating the study with a sample of adolescents among whom the superstitious beliefs are particularly prevalent. The participants (N = 99) were allocated to either a control or experimental group, and were asked to solve eight problems focused on cognitive reflection, conjunction fallacy, denominator neglect, and probabilistic reasoning. The experimental manipulation negatively affected boys' performance. Yet, it facilitated performance in girls via increase in their self-efficacy, measured as subjective estimate of future success in the tasks. Thus, gender seems to moderate the effect of luck-related belief on solutions to cognitive problems, which are an important part of our day-to-day decisions. Given initial gender gap in the present tasks, the crucial question to be addressed in future research is possibility of gender being a proxy for prior competence. It would imply that good luck beliefs might help low scorers, for instance in becoming less anxious and more confident, but could be harmful for high scorers.http://ejop.psychopen.eu/article/view/1697luck-related superstitionscognitive performancegender differencesself-efficacy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lenka Kostovičová
spellingShingle Lenka Kostovičová
The Differential Effects of Good Luck Belief on Cognitive Performance in Boys and Girls
Europe's Journal of Psychology
luck-related superstitions
cognitive performance
gender differences
self-efficacy
author_facet Lenka Kostovičová
author_sort Lenka Kostovičová
title The Differential Effects of Good Luck Belief on Cognitive Performance in Boys and Girls
title_short The Differential Effects of Good Luck Belief on Cognitive Performance in Boys and Girls
title_full The Differential Effects of Good Luck Belief on Cognitive Performance in Boys and Girls
title_fullStr The Differential Effects of Good Luck Belief on Cognitive Performance in Boys and Girls
title_full_unstemmed The Differential Effects of Good Luck Belief on Cognitive Performance in Boys and Girls
title_sort differential effects of good luck belief on cognitive performance in boys and girls
publisher PsychOpen
series Europe's Journal of Psychology
issn 1841-0413
publishDate 2019-02-01
description There is evidence that inducing a luck-related superstition leads to better performance on a variety of motor dexterity and cognitive tasks. However, some replication efforts have failed to succeed. At the same time, our previous findings suggest that the effect of good luck belief on cognitive performance interacts with gender. The present research aimed at replicating the study with a sample of adolescents among whom the superstitious beliefs are particularly prevalent. The participants (N = 99) were allocated to either a control or experimental group, and were asked to solve eight problems focused on cognitive reflection, conjunction fallacy, denominator neglect, and probabilistic reasoning. The experimental manipulation negatively affected boys' performance. Yet, it facilitated performance in girls via increase in their self-efficacy, measured as subjective estimate of future success in the tasks. Thus, gender seems to moderate the effect of luck-related belief on solutions to cognitive problems, which are an important part of our day-to-day decisions. Given initial gender gap in the present tasks, the crucial question to be addressed in future research is possibility of gender being a proxy for prior competence. It would imply that good luck beliefs might help low scorers, for instance in becoming less anxious and more confident, but could be harmful for high scorers.
topic luck-related superstitions
cognitive performance
gender differences
self-efficacy
url http://ejop.psychopen.eu/article/view/1697
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