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      Superstition predicts perception of illusory control

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          Abstract

          Superstitions are common, yet we have little understanding of the cognitive mechanisms that bring them about. This study used a laboratory-based analogue for superstitious beliefs that involved people monitoring the relationship between undertaking an action (pressing a button) and an outcome occurring (a light illuminating). The task was arranged such that there was no objective contingency between pressing the button and the light illuminating - the light was just as likely to illuminate whether the button was pressed or not. Nevertheless, most people rated the causal relationship between the button press and the light illuminating to be moderately positive, demonstrating an illusion of causality. This study found that the magnitude of this illusion was predicted by people's level of endorsement of common superstitious beliefs (measured using a novel Superstitious Beliefs Questionnaire), but was not associated with mood variables or their self-rated locus of control. This observation is consistent with a more general individual difference or bias to overweight conjunctive events over disjunctive events during causal reasoning in those with a propensity for superstitious beliefs.

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          Most cited references54

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          Coefficient alpha and the internal structure of tests

          Psychometrika, 16(3), 297-334
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            Little Jiffy, Mark Iv

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              jsPsych: a JavaScript library for creating behavioral experiments in a Web browser.

              Online experiments are growing in popularity, and the increasing sophistication of Web technology has made it possible to run complex behavioral experiments online using only a Web browser. Unlike with offline laboratory experiments, however, few tools exist to aid in the development of browser-based experiments. This makes the process of creating an experiment slow and challenging, particularly for researchers who lack a Web development background. This article introduces jsPsych, a JavaScript library for the development of Web-based experiments. jsPsych formalizes a way of describing experiments that is much simpler than writing the entire experiment from scratch. jsPsych then executes these descriptions automatically, handling the flow from one task to another. The jsPsych library is open-source and designed to be expanded by the research community. The project is available online at www.jspsych.org .
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                British Journal of Psychology
                Br J Psychol
                Wiley
                00071269
                August 24 2018
                Affiliations
                [1 ]School of Psychology; Flinders University; Bedford Park South Australia Australia
                [2 ]School of Psychology; UNSW Sydney; NSW Australia
                [3 ]Department of Experimental Psychology; University of Oxford; UK
                Article
                10.1111/bjop.12344
                30144046
                3f1d1b6e-1881-41e7-bcbf-4119344125f4
                © 2018

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

                http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor

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