A Puzzle Unsolved: Failure to Observe Different Effects of God and Religion Primes on Intergroup Attitudes

Religious priming has been found to have both positive and negative consequences, and recent research suggests that the activation of God-related and community-related religious cognitions may cause outgroup prosociality and outgroup derogation respectively. The present research sought to examine wh...

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Main Authors: Ramsay, Jonathan E., Tong, Eddie M. W., Pang, Joyce S., Chowdhury, Avijit
Other Authors: Allen, Philip
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2016
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/82660
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/40218
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-826602022-02-16T16:27:34Z A Puzzle Unsolved: Failure to Observe Different Effects of God and Religion Primes on Intergroup Attitudes Ramsay, Jonathan E. Tong, Eddie M. W. Pang, Joyce S. Chowdhury, Avijit Allen, Philip School of Humanities and Social Sciences Psychology Religious priming has been found to have both positive and negative consequences, and recent research suggests that the activation of God-related and community-related religious cognitions may cause outgroup prosociality and outgroup derogation respectively. The present research sought to examine whether reminders of God and religion have different effects on attitudes towards ingroup and outgroup members. Over two studies, little evidence was found for different effects of these two types of religious primes. In study 1, individuals primed with the words “religion”, “God” and a neutral control word evaluated both ingroup and outgroup members similarly, although a marginal tendency towards more negative evaluations of outgroup members by females exposed to religion primes was observed. In study 2, no significant differences in attitudes towards an outgroup member were observed between the God, religion, and neutral priming conditions. Furthermore, the gender effect observed in study 1 did not replicate in this second study. Possible explanations for these null effects are discussed. Published version 2016-03-08T05:58:15Z 2019-12-06T14:59:52Z 2016-03-08T05:58:15Z 2019-12-06T14:59:52Z 2016-01-26 Journal Article Ramsay, J. E., Tong, E. M. W., Pang, J. S., & Chowdhury, A. (2016). A Puzzle Unsolved: Failure to Observe Different Effects of God and Religion Primes on Intergroup Attitudes. PLoS ONE, 11(1), e0147178-. 1932-6203 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/82660 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/40218 10.1371/journal.pone.0147178 26812526 en PLoS ONE © 2016 Ramsay et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. 21 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Psychology
spellingShingle Psychology
Ramsay, Jonathan E.
Tong, Eddie M. W.
Pang, Joyce S.
Chowdhury, Avijit
A Puzzle Unsolved: Failure to Observe Different Effects of God and Religion Primes on Intergroup Attitudes
description Religious priming has been found to have both positive and negative consequences, and recent research suggests that the activation of God-related and community-related religious cognitions may cause outgroup prosociality and outgroup derogation respectively. The present research sought to examine whether reminders of God and religion have different effects on attitudes towards ingroup and outgroup members. Over two studies, little evidence was found for different effects of these two types of religious primes. In study 1, individuals primed with the words “religion”, “God” and a neutral control word evaluated both ingroup and outgroup members similarly, although a marginal tendency towards more negative evaluations of outgroup members by females exposed to religion primes was observed. In study 2, no significant differences in attitudes towards an outgroup member were observed between the God, religion, and neutral priming conditions. Furthermore, the gender effect observed in study 1 did not replicate in this second study. Possible explanations for these null effects are discussed.
author2 Allen, Philip
author_facet Allen, Philip
Ramsay, Jonathan E.
Tong, Eddie M. W.
Pang, Joyce S.
Chowdhury, Avijit
format Article
author Ramsay, Jonathan E.
Tong, Eddie M. W.
Pang, Joyce S.
Chowdhury, Avijit
author_sort Ramsay, Jonathan E.
title A Puzzle Unsolved: Failure to Observe Different Effects of God and Religion Primes on Intergroup Attitudes
title_short A Puzzle Unsolved: Failure to Observe Different Effects of God and Religion Primes on Intergroup Attitudes
title_full A Puzzle Unsolved: Failure to Observe Different Effects of God and Religion Primes on Intergroup Attitudes
title_fullStr A Puzzle Unsolved: Failure to Observe Different Effects of God and Religion Primes on Intergroup Attitudes
title_full_unstemmed A Puzzle Unsolved: Failure to Observe Different Effects of God and Religion Primes on Intergroup Attitudes
title_sort puzzle unsolved: failure to observe different effects of god and religion primes on intergroup attitudes
publishDate 2016
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/82660
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/40218
_version_ 1725985506568699904