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Title: Lecture 8: Cognitive Factors Underlying Paranormal Belief


1
Lecture 8Cognitive Factors Underlying
Paranormal Belief
  • 1. Introduction
  • 2. Review of relevant cognitive factors
  • 3. Conclusion

2
One of every four Americans believes in ghosts
3
One of every four Americans believe they have had
a telepathic experience
4
One in six Americans have felt that they have
been in touch with someone who had died
5
One in ten claim to have seen or been in the
presence of a ghost
6
More than half believe in the Devil, and one in
ten claimed to have talked to the Devil
7
One in seven say they have personally seen a UFO
8
Three in four read their horoscopes in the
newspaper, and one in four say they believe in
astrology
9
Opinion Poll Data, Daily Mail, 2/2/98
  • 64 believe that some people have powers that
    cannot be explained by science
  • 63 believe in God
  • 52 believe in life after death
  • 49 believe in ghosts
  • 49 believe in precognitive dreams
  • 49 believe in heaven (only 28 believe in hell!)
  • 47 believe in thought reading
  • 41 believe in communication with the dead
  • 34 believe in psychokinesis
  • 26 believe in angels
  • 25 believe in reincarnation

10
Anomalistic Psychology
  • Anomalistic psychology may be defined as the
    study of extraordinary phenomena of behaviour and
    experience, including (but not restricted to)
    those which are often labelled paranormal. It
    is directed towards understanding bizarre
    experiences that many people have without
    assuming a priori that there is anything
    paranormal involved. It entails attempting to
    explain paranormal and related beliefs and
    ostensibly paranormal experiences in terms of
    known (or knowable) psychological and physical
    factors.

11
Illusion of Control(Langer, 1975)
  • a tendency for people to perceive a random
    process as being potentially under their control,
    which is increased if the situation seems to
    incorporate elements of skill.
  • Cf. New Hampshire Lottery (1964) with New Jersey
    Lottery (1971)
  • ESP Ayeroff Abelson (1976)
  • PK Benassi, Sweeney Drevno (1979)
  • Coin-tossing Blackmore Troscianko (1985)
  • PK Brugger, Regard Landis (1991)

12
Poor Estimation of Probabilities
  • The Birthday Problem How many people would you
    need to have at a party to have a 5050 chance
    that two of them share the same birthday
    (ignoring year)?
  • 23

13
Precognitive Dreams (1)
  • Dreams will come true purely on the basis of
    coincidental matches between dream events and
    future events (Paulos, 1988)
  • If we label a dream as apparently precognitive
    if chances of it coming true are less than 1 in
    10,000 and assume each person remembers one dream
    per night ...

14
Precognitive Dreams (2)
  • over a full year, 96.42 of the population will
    not have such a dream BUT
  • around 3.6 of the population WILL!
  • Thats 9 million people in the US alone.
  • In fact, additional non-paranormal factors will
    lead to even greater numbers

15
Probability Estimation
  • Blackmore Troscianko (1985) found some
    significant differences between believers and
    non-believers
  • Other studies have failed to do so (e.g., Mathews
    Blackmore, 1995 Blackmore, 1997 Blackmore,
    Galaud Walker, 1994)
  • Musch Ehrenberg (2002) did find correlation but
    claimed it reflected general intelligence
    (Irwins reviews cast doubt on this)

16
Poor Concept of Randomness
  • Would lead to a tendency to read significance
    into random patterns
  • Subjective random number generation tasks (e.g.,
    Wegenaar, 1972)
  • Repetition avoidance in random strings (Brugger,
    Landis Regard, 1990)

17
Reasoning Errors
  • Wierzbicki (1985) produced evidence suggesting
    that believers were poorer at syllogistic
    reasoning than non-believers
  • Irwin (1991) unable to replicate suggested
    results might reflect experimenter/context
    effects
  • Roberts Seager (1999) did replicate

18
Critical Thinking
  • Alcock Otis (1980) and Gray Mill (1990)
    claimed believers were poorer at critical
    thinking
  • Roe (1995) has criticised these studies on
    methodological grounds

19
Confirmatory Bias
  • Believers in astrology ignoring those parts of a
    reading that do not fit?
  • Psychics ignoring failed predictions?
  • Bias stronger in believers than disbelievers?
  • Alcock Otis (1980)
  • Russell Jones (1980)
  • Jones Russell (1980)
  • French (1992)
  • Roe (1985)

20
Lack of Knowledge of Conjuring Techniques
  • Singer Benassi (1981)
  • Wiseman Morris (1995)
  • Wiseman, Smith Wiseman
  • (1995 following Besterman,
  • 1932)

21
Population Sterotypes
  • Marks (2000 after Marks Kammann, 1980)
  • Lund (1939) star is favourite response using
    Zener cards
  • Rigby (1989)
  • French (1992)

22
Perceptual Biases
  • Blackmoore Moore (1994)
  • Brugger et al. (1993)

23
Lack of Knowledge of Cold Reading the Barnum
Effect
  • Cold reading a technique that can be used to
    give complete strangers the impression that you
    know all about them (Hyman, 1977 Dutton, 1998
    Roe, 1995)
  • The Barnum Effect one aspect of cold reading,
    relying on the fact that people often accept
    vague, general and ambiguous statements as
    descriptive of their own unique personalities
    (Dickson Kelly, 1985 Furnham Schofield,
    1987 Snyder, Shenkel, Lowery, 1977)

24
Subjective Validation
  • This occurs when two unrelated events are
    perceived to be related because a belief,
    expectancy, or hypothesis demands or requires a
    relationship" (Marks, 2000, p. 41).

25
Electronic Voice Phenomenon
  • It is claimed (e.g., Raudive, 1971) that by
    leaving a tape-recorder in record mode or by
    recording from a radio set between stations,
    messages from the spirit realm can be recorded
  • Interpretation of the vague sounds recorded is
    often entirely subjective (Smith, 1972 Ellis,
    1975)

26
Examples of EVP (1)
  • The coward
  • Were sorry
  • Get out, get out, get out of my house

27
Examples of EVP (2)
  • Come and find the cake
  • Supposed to say Someones in the way!

28
Universality ofCognitive Biases
  • It would make sense in evolutionary terms for
    humans to develop cognitive systems that can
    readily detect patterns and regularities, causes
    and effects, in the environment. The fact that
    people claim to detect regularities even when
    confronted with true randomness, or that people
    often perceive causal relationships where none
    exist, may be a small price to pay from an
    evolutionary perspective.
  • (French, 1993, p. 195)

29
Acknowledgement
  • With thanks to Hilary Evans, proprietor of the
    Mary Evans Picture Library, for permission to use
    illustrations featured in this presentation.
    These illustrations must not be reproduced in any
    form without permission from the Mary Evans
    Picture Library.
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