The Einstein effect provides global evidence for scientific source credibility effects and the influence of religiosity

People tend to evaluate information from reliable sources more favourably, but it is unclear exactly how perceivers' worldviews interact with this source credibility effect. In a large and diverse cross-cultural sample (N = 10,195 from 24 countries), we presented participants with obscure, mean...

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Main Authors: Hoogeveen, Suzanne, Haaf, Julia M., Bulbulia, Joseph A., Ross, Robert M., McKay, Ryan, Altay, Sacha, Bendixen, Theiss, Berniūnas, Renatas, Cheshin, Arik, Gentili, Claudio, Georgescu, Raluca, Gervais, Will M., Hagel, Kristin, Kavanagh, Christopher, Levy, Neil, Neely, Alejandra, Qiu, Lin, Rabelo, André, Ramsay, Jonathan E., Rutjens, Bastiaan T., Turpin, Hugh, Uzarevic, Filip, Wuyts, Robin, Xygalatas, Dimitris, van Elk, Michiel
Other Authors: School of Social Sciences
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2023
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/164349
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1643492023-01-17T04:55:04Z The Einstein effect provides global evidence for scientific source credibility effects and the influence of religiosity Hoogeveen, Suzanne Haaf, Julia M. Bulbulia, Joseph A. Ross, Robert M. McKay, Ryan Altay, Sacha Bendixen, Theiss Berniūnas, Renatas Cheshin, Arik Gentili, Claudio Georgescu, Raluca Gervais, Will M. Hagel, Kristin Kavanagh, Christopher Levy, Neil Neely, Alejandra Qiu, Lin Rabelo, André Ramsay, Jonathan E. Rutjens, Bastiaan T. Turpin, Hugh Uzarevic, Filip Wuyts, Robin Xygalatas, Dimitris van Elk, Michiel School of Social Sciences Social sciences::Psychology Decision Making Reproducibility People tend to evaluate information from reliable sources more favourably, but it is unclear exactly how perceivers' worldviews interact with this source credibility effect. In a large and diverse cross-cultural sample (N = 10,195 from 24 countries), we presented participants with obscure, meaningless statements attributed to either a spiritual guru or a scientist. We found a robust global source credibility effect for scientific authorities, which we dub 'the Einstein effect': across all 24 countries and all levels of religiosity, scientists held greater authority than spiritual gurus. In addition, individual religiosity predicted a weaker relative preference for the statement from the scientist compared with the spiritual guru, and was more strongly associated with credibility judgements for the guru than the scientist. Independent data on explicit trust ratings across 143 countries mirrored our experimental findings. These findings suggest that irrespective of one's religious worldview, across cultures science is a powerful and universal heuristic that signals the reliability of information. This work was supported by funds from the Templeton Foundation (grant number 60663) to M.v.E., the Cogito Foundation (grant number R10917) to R.Mc.K., the Australian Research Council (grant number DP180102384) to N.L. and R.M.R., Templeton Religion Trust (reference TRT0196) to J.A.B., and the French Agence Nationale de la Recherche (reference 17-EURE-0017 FrontCog and 10-IDEX-0001-02 PSL) to S.A. The analysis was carried out on the Dutch national e-infrastructure with the support of SURF Cooperative. 2023-01-17T04:55:04Z 2023-01-17T04:55:04Z 2022 Journal Article Hoogeveen, S., Haaf, J. M., Bulbulia, J. A., Ross, R. M., McKay, R., Altay, S., Bendixen, T., Berniūnas, R., Cheshin, A., Gentili, C., Georgescu, R., Gervais, W. M., Hagel, K., Kavanagh, C., Levy, N., Neely, A., Qiu, L., Rabelo, A., Ramsay, J. E., ...van Elk, M. (2022). The Einstein effect provides global evidence for scientific source credibility effects and the influence of religiosity. Nature Human Behaviour, 6(4), 523-535. https://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41562-021-01273-8 2397-3374 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/164349 10.1038/s41562-021-01273-8 35132171 2-s2.0-85124371346 4 6 523 535 en Nature Human Behaviour © 2022 The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited. All rights reserved.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Psychology
Decision Making
Reproducibility
spellingShingle Social sciences::Psychology
Decision Making
Reproducibility
Hoogeveen, Suzanne
Haaf, Julia M.
Bulbulia, Joseph A.
Ross, Robert M.
McKay, Ryan
Altay, Sacha
Bendixen, Theiss
Berniūnas, Renatas
Cheshin, Arik
Gentili, Claudio
Georgescu, Raluca
Gervais, Will M.
Hagel, Kristin
Kavanagh, Christopher
Levy, Neil
Neely, Alejandra
Qiu, Lin
Rabelo, André
Ramsay, Jonathan E.
Rutjens, Bastiaan T.
Turpin, Hugh
Uzarevic, Filip
Wuyts, Robin
Xygalatas, Dimitris
van Elk, Michiel
The Einstein effect provides global evidence for scientific source credibility effects and the influence of religiosity
description People tend to evaluate information from reliable sources more favourably, but it is unclear exactly how perceivers' worldviews interact with this source credibility effect. In a large and diverse cross-cultural sample (N = 10,195 from 24 countries), we presented participants with obscure, meaningless statements attributed to either a spiritual guru or a scientist. We found a robust global source credibility effect for scientific authorities, which we dub 'the Einstein effect': across all 24 countries and all levels of religiosity, scientists held greater authority than spiritual gurus. In addition, individual religiosity predicted a weaker relative preference for the statement from the scientist compared with the spiritual guru, and was more strongly associated with credibility judgements for the guru than the scientist. Independent data on explicit trust ratings across 143 countries mirrored our experimental findings. These findings suggest that irrespective of one's religious worldview, across cultures science is a powerful and universal heuristic that signals the reliability of information.
author2 School of Social Sciences
author_facet School of Social Sciences
Hoogeveen, Suzanne
Haaf, Julia M.
Bulbulia, Joseph A.
Ross, Robert M.
McKay, Ryan
Altay, Sacha
Bendixen, Theiss
Berniūnas, Renatas
Cheshin, Arik
Gentili, Claudio
Georgescu, Raluca
Gervais, Will M.
Hagel, Kristin
Kavanagh, Christopher
Levy, Neil
Neely, Alejandra
Qiu, Lin
Rabelo, André
Ramsay, Jonathan E.
Rutjens, Bastiaan T.
Turpin, Hugh
Uzarevic, Filip
Wuyts, Robin
Xygalatas, Dimitris
van Elk, Michiel
format Article
author Hoogeveen, Suzanne
Haaf, Julia M.
Bulbulia, Joseph A.
Ross, Robert M.
McKay, Ryan
Altay, Sacha
Bendixen, Theiss
Berniūnas, Renatas
Cheshin, Arik
Gentili, Claudio
Georgescu, Raluca
Gervais, Will M.
Hagel, Kristin
Kavanagh, Christopher
Levy, Neil
Neely, Alejandra
Qiu, Lin
Rabelo, André
Ramsay, Jonathan E.
Rutjens, Bastiaan T.
Turpin, Hugh
Uzarevic, Filip
Wuyts, Robin
Xygalatas, Dimitris
van Elk, Michiel
author_sort Hoogeveen, Suzanne
title The Einstein effect provides global evidence for scientific source credibility effects and the influence of religiosity
title_short The Einstein effect provides global evidence for scientific source credibility effects and the influence of religiosity
title_full The Einstein effect provides global evidence for scientific source credibility effects and the influence of religiosity
title_fullStr The Einstein effect provides global evidence for scientific source credibility effects and the influence of religiosity
title_full_unstemmed The Einstein effect provides global evidence for scientific source credibility effects and the influence of religiosity
title_sort einstein effect provides global evidence for scientific source credibility effects and the influence of religiosity
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/164349
_version_ 1756370583750180864