Preferential Biases for Texts That Include Neuroscientific Jargon.

Psychol Rep

Dipartimento di Scienze Psicologiche, Pedagogiche e della Formazione, CITC, Università degli Studi di Palermo, Italy.

Published: June 2016

The results of an experiment of preferential biases for texts that include neuroscientific jargon are presented. Such preferential bias has been reported even when the presented jargon is meaningless. In a variation of the well-known Weisberg et al. experiment, a group of undergraduate students (N = 150; females 48%, males 52%, other 0%; M age = 22.4 year, SD = 2.6) chose between two possible explanations for a psychological phenomenon: a correct explanation or a circular restatement of facts. Unrelated neuroscientific terms were added to one of the explanations. Participants were asked to choose the correct explanation. There was a statistically significant preference for the explanation without neuroscientific terms. These findings differ from Weisberg et al.'s experiment and a number of others. The implications of this discrepancy are discussed.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0033294116649000DOI Listing

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