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Expectancy Effects Threaten the Inferential Validity of Synchrony-Prosociality Research.
Atwood, S; Schachner, Adena; Mehr, Samuel A.
Afiliación
  • Atwood S; Department of Psychology, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08540 USA.
  • Schachner A; Department of Psychology, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093-0109 USA.
  • Mehr SA; Haskins Laboratories, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06511 USA.
Open Mind (Camb) ; 6: 280-290, 2022.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36891035
ABSTRACT
Many studies argue that synchronized movement increases prosocial attitudes and behavior. We reviewed meta-analytic evidence that reported effects of synchrony may be driven by experimenter expectancy, leading to experimenter bias; and participant expectancy, otherwise known as placebo effects. We found that a majority of published studies do not adequately control for experimenter bias and that multiple independent replication attempts with added controls have failed to find the original effects. In a preregistered experiment, we measured participant expectancy directly, asking whether participants have a priori expectations about synchrony and prosociality that match the findings in published literature. Expectations about the effects of synchrony on prosocial attitudes directly mirrored previous experimental findings (including both positive and null effects)-despite the participants not actually engaging in synchrony. On the basis of this evidence, we propose an alternative account of the reported bottom-up effects of synchrony on prosociality the effects of synchrony on prosociality may be explicable as the result of top-down expectations invoked by placebo and experimenter effects.
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Texto completo: 1 Bases de datos: MEDLINE Tipo de estudio: Clinical_trials Idioma: En Revista: Open Mind (Camb) Año: 2022 Tipo del documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Bases de datos: MEDLINE Tipo de estudio: Clinical_trials Idioma: En Revista: Open Mind (Camb) Año: 2022 Tipo del documento: Article