Preregistration

Time for an Update: How does Ambiguous Scientific Evidence Change our Beliefs About the World?

Author(s) / Creator(s)

Schreiner, Marcel Raphael
Quevedo Pütter, Julian
Rebholz, Tobias R.

Abstract / Description

Scientific evidence for many effects tends to be ambiguous, that is, some studies show an effect and others do not. In this study, we investigate how people update their prior beliefs based on ambiguous scientific evidence. We aim to identify general patterns or strategies of belief updating. We focus on three potential strategies: An uncertainty-weighting strategy (Behrens et al., 2007; Hogarth & Einhorn, 1992) where people update their beliefs less the higher the uncertainty of evidence, a unidimensional strategy (Nassar et al., 2010) where people update their beliefs more the more the evidence differs from their prior beliefs, and a weight-last-stronger strategy (see e.g., Hogarth & Einhorn, 1992) where people weight the evidence from the latest study stronger than that of previous studies. Further, we aim to assess the impact of subjective expertise (which may be an indicator of the strengths of prior beliefs), trust in (psychological) research and the breadth of information (the number of studies investigating an effect) on belief updating.

Keyword(s)

belief updating science communication trust in science statistical modeling

Persistent Identifier

PsychArchives acquisition timestamp

2022-06-14 06:35:51 UTC

Publisher

PsychArchives

Citation

  • 2
    2022-06-14
    It has been erroneously stated that participants will be given nine questions from the Test of Scientific Literacy Skills to assess scientific literacy, but ten questions were intended to be used. This has been corrected.
  • 1
    2022-05-19
  • Author(s) / Creator(s)
    Schreiner, Marcel Raphael
  • Author(s) / Creator(s)
    Quevedo Pütter, Julian
  • Author(s) / Creator(s)
    Rebholz, Tobias R.
  • PsychArchives acquisition timestamp
    2022-06-14T06:35:51Z
  • Made available on
    2022-05-19T13:10:13Z
  • Made available on
    2022-06-14T06:35:51Z
  • Date of first publication
    2022-05-19
  • Abstract / Description
    Scientific evidence for many effects tends to be ambiguous, that is, some studies show an effect and others do not. In this study, we investigate how people update their prior beliefs based on ambiguous scientific evidence. We aim to identify general patterns or strategies of belief updating. We focus on three potential strategies: An uncertainty-weighting strategy (Behrens et al., 2007; Hogarth & Einhorn, 1992) where people update their beliefs less the higher the uncertainty of evidence, a unidimensional strategy (Nassar et al., 2010) where people update their beliefs more the more the evidence differs from their prior beliefs, and a weight-last-stronger strategy (see e.g., Hogarth & Einhorn, 1992) where people weight the evidence from the latest study stronger than that of previous studies. Further, we aim to assess the impact of subjective expertise (which may be an indicator of the strengths of prior beliefs), trust in (psychological) research and the breadth of information (the number of studies investigating an effect) on belief updating.
    en_US
  • Publication status
    other
    en
  • Review status
    unknown
    en
  • Persistent Identifier
    https://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.6911
  • Persistent Identifier
    https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/5996.2
  • Language of content
    eng
    en_US
  • Publisher
    PsychArchives
    en_US
  • Is related to
    https://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.12877
  • Is related to
    https://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.12878
  • Is related to
    https://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.14106
  • Is related to
    https://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.12880
  • Keyword(s)
    belief updating
    en_US
  • Keyword(s)
    science communication
    en_US
  • Keyword(s)
    trust in science
    en_US
  • Keyword(s)
    statistical modeling
    en_US
  • Dewey Decimal Classification number(s)
    150
  • Title
    Time for an Update: How does Ambiguous Scientific Evidence Change our Beliefs About the World?
    en_US
  • DRO type
    preregistration
    en_US