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Ask the pendulum: personality predictors of ideomotor performance

机译:问钟摆:思想运动表现的个性预测因素

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摘要

For centuries, people have asked questions to hand-held pendulums and interpreted their movements as responses from the divine. These movements occur due to the ideomotor effect, wherein priming or thinking of a motion causes muscle movements that end up swinging the pendulum. By associating particular swinging movements with “yes” and “no” responses, we investigated whether pendulums can aid decision-making and which personality traits correlate with this performance. Participants (N = 80) completed a visual detection task in which they searched for a target letter among rapidly presented characters. In the verbal condition, participants stated whether they saw the target in each trial. In the pendulum condition, participants instead mentally “asked” a hand-held pendulum whether the target was present; particular motions signified “yes” and “no”. We measured the accuracy of their responses as well as their sensitivity and bias using signal detection theory. We also assessed four personality measures: locus of control (feelings of control over one’s life), transliminality (sensitivity to subtle stimuli), need for cognition (preference for analytical thinking), and faith in intuition (preference for intuitive thinking). Overall, locus of control predicted verbal performance and transliminality predicted pendulum performance. Accuracy was low in both conditions (verbal: 57%, pendulum: 53%), but bias was higher in the verbal condition (d = 1.10). We confirmed this bias difference in a second study (d = 0.47, N = 40). Our results suggest that people have different decision strategies when using a pendulum compared to conscious guessing. These findings may help explain why some people can answer questions more accurately with pendulums and Ouija boards. More broadly, identifying the differences between ideomotor and verbal responses could lead to practical ways to improve decision-making.
机译:几个世纪以来,人们向手持式摆锤提问,并将其动作解释为神圣的回应。这些运动是由于意识运动效应而发生的,其中引发或思考运动会导致肌肉运动,最终导致摆锤摆动。通过将特定的摇摆动作与“是”和“否”响应相关联,我们研究了摆锤是否可以辅助决策,以及哪些人格特质与此表现相关。参与者(N = 80)完成了视觉检测任务,他们在快速呈现的字符中搜索目标字母。在口头条件下,参与者陈述他们是否在每次审判中都看到了目标。在摆的情况下,参与者会从心理上“询问”手持摆是否存在目标。特定动作表示“是”和“否”。我们使用信号检测理论测量了其响应的准确性以及其灵敏度和偏差。我们还评估了四种人格测度:控制源(对生活的控制感),半透明性(对细微刺激的敏感度),认知需求(对分析性思维的偏爱)和对直觉的信念(对直觉性思维的偏爱)。总体而言,控制源可预测言语表现,半透明预测钟摆表现。两种情况下的准确性都较低(口头:57%,钟摆:53%),但言语条件下的偏见更高(d = 1.10)。我们在第二项研究中证实了这种偏差差异(d = 0.47,N = 40)。我们的结果表明,与有意识的猜测相比,人们在使用摆时具有不同的决策策略。这些发现可能有助于解释为什么有些人可以使用摆锤和Ouija板来更准确地回答问题。从更广泛的意义上讲,识别意识运动和言语反应之间的差异可以导致改善决策的实用方法。

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