| Literature DB >> 27054566 |
Gordon Pennycook1, Robert M Ross2,3, Derek J Koehler1, Jonathan A Fugelsang1.
Abstract
Individual differences in the mere willingness to think analytically has been shown to predict religious disbelief. Recently, however, it has been argued that analytic thinkers are not actually less religious; rather, the putative association may be a result of religiosity typically being measured after analytic thinking (an order effect). In light of this possibility, we report four studies in which a negative correlation between religious belief and performance on analytic thinking measures is found when religious belief is measured in a separate session. We also performed a meta-analysis on all previously published studies on the topic along with our four new studies (N = 15,078, k = 31), focusing specifically on the association between performance on the Cognitive Reflection Test (the most widely used individual difference measure of analytic thinking) and religious belief. This meta-analysis revealed an overall negative correlation (r) of -.18, 95% CI [-.21, -.16]. Although this correlation is modest, self-identified atheists (N = 133) scored 18.7% higher than religiously affiliated individuals (N = 597) on a composite measure of analytic thinking administered across our four new studies (d = .72). Our results indicate that the association between analytic thinking and religious disbelief is not caused by a simple order effect. There is good evidence that atheists and agnostics are more reflective than religious believers.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27054566 PMCID: PMC4824409 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0153039
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Demographics for full participant samples (i.e., excluding those who failed the attention check) in Studies 1–4.
| Study 1 | Study 2 | Study 3 | Study 4 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 265 | 99 | 205 | 192 | |
| 107 | 50 | 73 | 75 | |
| 372 | 149 | 279 | 267 | |
| Age (SD) | 20.3 (3.9) | 21.7 (4.9) | 20.2 (3.9) | 20.7 (5.2) |
a One participant did not indicate their gender.
Materials for Studies 1–4. CRT = Cognitive Reflection Test.
| Study 1 | Study 2 | Study 3 | Study 4 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Religiosity | Religious Belief Scale | X | X | X | X |
| God Type | X | X | X | X | |
| Religious Affiliation | X | X | X | X | |
| Analytic Cognitive Style | CRT (original) | X | X | X | X |
| CRT (additional) | X | X | X | ||
| Base-Rate Neglect | X | X | |||
| Heuristics/Biases | X | X | |||
| Cognitive Ability | Numeracy | X | X | X | X |
| Wordsum | X | X | X | X |
a The additional CRT questions in Study 1 (N = 3) differed from those used in Studies 3 and 4 (N = 4; see S3 Text.
Mean proportion correct and associated standard deviations and skewness (in brackets: SD /Skew) for cognitive variables.
| Study 1 | Study 2 | Study 3 | Study 4 | Combined | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CRT1 | .39 (.37 /.42) | .40 (.39 /.41) | .37 (.36 /.46) | .43 (.38 /.28) | .40 (.37 /.40) |
| CRT2 | .38 (.36 /.46) | .40 (.39 /.43) | .36 (.36 /.51) | .42 (.39 /.32) | .39 (.37 /.43) |
| CRT3 | .36 (.33 /.53) | - | .41 (.33 /.35) | .45 (.32 /.26) | .40 (.33 /.38) |
| Base-Rate Neglect | .35 (.36 /.72) | .38 (.34 /.58) | - | - | .36 (.35 /.68) |
| Heuristics/ Biases | - | - | .52 (.18 /.44) | .53 (.17 /.19) | .52 (.17 /.32) |
| ACS | .37 (.27 /.50) | .39 (.29 /.33) | .43 (.24 /.56) | .47 (.24 /.34) | .41 (.26 /.38) |
| Numeracy | .73 (.30 /-.78) | .80 (.24 /-1.12) | .73 (.28 /-.78) | .76 (.30 /-1.01) | .75 (.29 /-.89) |
| Wordsum | .59 (.18 /-.06) | .63 (.17 /-.17) | .60 (.17 /.15) | .62 (.18 /-.12) | .60 (.18 /-.05) |
CRT = Cognitive Reflection Test
CRT1 = Accuracy on original 3-item CRT
CRT2 = Excludes participants who indicated seeing the CRT before
CRT3 = Accuracy on additional CRT problems; ACS = Analytic Cognitive Style (mean of CRT1, CRT3, Base-Rate Neglect, Heuristics/Biases).
Correlations (r) among cognitive variables, collapsing across all four studies.
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. CRT1 | - | ||||||
| 2. CRT2 | - | - | |||||
| 3. CRT3 | .57 | .57 | - | ||||
| 4. Base-Rate Neglect | .26 | .23 | .23 | - | |||
| 5. Heuristics/Biases | .51 | .50 | .48 | - | - | ||
| 6. Numeracy | .42 | .42 | .38 | .21 | .41 | - | |
| 7. Wordsum | .38 | .37 | .35 | .22 | .41 | .30 | - |
***indicates p < .001.
CRT = Cognitive Reflection Test
CRT1 = Accuracy on original 3-item CRT
CRT2 = Excludes participants who indicated seeing the CRT before
CRT3 = Accuracy on additional CRT problems. N for each correlation listed in brackets.
Correlations (r) between religious belief (taken in a mass-testing survey) and performance on cognitive tests.
| CRT1 | CRT2 | CRT3 | Base-Rate Neglect | Heuristics/Biases | ACS | Numeracy | Wordsum | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study 1 | -.26 | -.24 | -.17 | -.23 | - | -.29 | -.13 | -.17 |
| Study 2 | -.21 | -.22 | - | -.25 | - | -.29 | -.17 | -.10 (149) |
| Study 3 | -.17 | -.16 | -.16 | - | -.16 | -.20 | -.08 (277) | -.10 (277) |
| Study 4 | -.23 | -.25 | -.21 | - | -.21 | -.26 | -.05 (267) | -.26 |
| Combined | -.22 | -.22 | -.18 | -.23 | -.18 | -.26 | -.11 | -.17 |
***indicates p < .001
**indicates p < .01
*indicates p < .05.
CRT = Cognitive Reflection Test
CRT1 = Accuracy on original 3-item CRT
CRT2 = Excludes participants who indicated seeing the CRT before
CRT3 = Accuracy on additional CRT problems; ACS = Analytic Cognitive Style (mean of CRT1, CRT3, Base-Rate Neglect, Heuristics/Biases). N for each correlation listed in brackets.
Fig 1Mean accuracy on Analytic Cognitive Style (ACS) measures as a function of theism (taken in a mass testing survey). N’s = 570, 294, 200 (respectively).
Fig 2Mean accuracy on Analytic Cognitive Style (ACS) measures as a function of religious affiliation (taken in a pre-screen survey). N’s = 597, 171, 142, 133 (respectively).
Summary of studies reporting a correlation (r) between a behavioral measure of analytic thinking and religiosity (variously measured). Significant correlations are in bold.
| Reference | Study | Analytic thinking measure | Religiosity measure | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shenhav et al. | 1 | CRT (intuitive scoring) | God | 882 | |
| (2012) [ | Convinced of God’s existence | ||||
| Immortal souls | |||||
| Belief change | |||||
| 2 | CRT | God | 321 | ||
| Pennycook et al. | 1 | CRT | Religious belief scale | 181 | |
| (2012) [ | Base-rate neglect | ||||
| 2 | CRT | Religious belief scale | 267 | ||
| Base-rate neglect | |||||
| Gervais & | 1 | CRT | Intrinsic religiosity | 179 | |
| Norenzayan | Intuitive religious belief | ||||
| (2012) [ | Supernatural agents | ||||
| Pennycook et al. (2013) [ | 1 | Belief bias syllogisms | Religious belief scale | 91 | |
| Kahan (2013) | 1 | CRT | Importance of religion | 1750 | |
| [ | Prayer frequency | ||||
| Razmyar & | 1 | CRT | Overall religiosity | 150 | |
| Reeve (2013) | Overall spirituality | ||||
| [ | Prayer frequency | ||||
| Extrinsic religiosity | |||||
| Intrinsic religiosity | |||||
| Fundamentalism | -.10 | ||||
| Scriptural acceptance | |||||
| Piazza & Sousa (2014) [ | 3 | CRT (intuitive scoring) | Overall religiosity | 192 | |
| Pennycook et al. | 1 | CRT | Religious belief scale | 505 | |
| (2014a) [ | Base-rate neglect | ||||
| Pennycook et al. | 1 | Base-rate neglect | Religious belief scale | 78 | |
| (2014b) [ | 2 | CRT | Religious belief scale | 198 | |
| Base-rate neglect | 200 | ||||
| 3 | Base-rate neglect (rapid-response) | Religious belief scale | -.15 | 89 | |
| Browne et al. | 1 | CRT | Strong faith | 1137 | |
| (2014) | Spiritual thinking | ||||
| Byrd (2014) | 1 | CRT (intuitive scoring) | Theism | 412 | |
| McCutcheon et | 1 | CRT | Intrinsic religiosity | .04 | 164 |
| al. (2014) [ | Belief bias syllogisms | -.02 | |||
| Baron et al. (2015) [ | 4 | CRT/ Belief bias syllogisms (combined) | God determines morality | 96 | |
| Gervais | 1 | CRT | God | 787 | |
| [ | 2 | CRT | God | 596 | |
| Pennycook et al. | 1 | CRT | Religious belief scale | 279 | |
| (2015) [ | Heuristics & Biases battery | ||||
| 2 | Heuristics & Biases battery | Religious belief scale | 187 | ||
| Finley et al. | CRT | CRT | Intrinsic religiosity | 410 | |
| (2015) [ | First | Intuitive religious belief | |||
| Supernatural agents | |||||
| Belief | CRT | Intrinsic religiosity | .04 | 410 | |
| First | Intuitive religious belief | < .01 | |||
| Supernatural agents | -.03 | ||||
| Lindeman & Lipsanen (2016) [ | 1 | CRT | Religious belief scale | 3044 | |
| Jack et al. (in | 1 | CRT | God | 236 | |
| press) [ | 2 | CRT | God | 233 | |
| 3 | CRT | God | 159 | ||
| 4 | CRT | God | 527 | ||
| 5 | CRT | God | -.23 | 69 | |
| 6 | CRT | God | 459 | ||
| 8 | CRT | God | 371 | ||
| Current study | 1 | CRT | Religious belief scale | 372 | |
| Base-rate neglect | |||||
| 2 | CRT | Religious belief scale | 148 | ||
| Base-rate neglect | 149 | ||||
| 3 | CRT | Religious belief scale | 277 | ||
| Heuristics/biases | |||||
| 4 | CRT | Religious belief scale | 267 | ||
| Heuristics/biases |
a Value is a point biserial correlation coefficient (dichotomous variable).
b These values were computed by the present authors using Kahan’s (2013) [27] data, which were available online through the Society of Judgment and Decision Making website (http://journal.sjdm.org/vol8.4.html).
c Some of these measures of religiosity relate to aspects of religious practice and commitment and not religious belief (see [11]).
d The CRT was administered via phone interview in this study and performance was exceptionally low. This may explain the attenuated correlations.
e This analysis excludes participants who had previous knowledge of the CRT. Around half of the sample includes philosophers either with a PhD or who were in a PhD program at the time of the study. Participants in this study were given the CRT before the theism measure, but with a personality task in-between.
f The measures were completed in a paper-and-pencil study and the order of the pages was varied (no order analyses were reported).
g These values were computed by the present authors using Gervais’ (2015) [5] data, which were available online through the author’s website (http://willgervais.com/journal-articles/). Participants with missing data for any CRT item were removed from analysis.
* Indicates that the religious belief measure was administered after the analytic thinking measure.
§ Indicates that the religious belief measure was administered before the analytic thinking measure.
ŧ Indicates that the religious belief measure was administered in a separate session as the analytic thinking measure.
# Indicates that the correlation was included in the meta-analysis.
Note: This table does not include correlations between religious belief and self-report measures of analytic thinking disposition (e.g., [38]).
Fig 3Forest plot of random effect meta-analysis showing effect sizes (r) for the association between religious belief scales and performance on the CRT.
Fig 4Funnel plot of standard error by Fisher’s Z.