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The effect of emotion on statistical reasoning: Findings from a base rates task

Eliades, M., Mansell, W., & Blanchette, I.

Journal of Cognitive Psychology. 2013;25:277-282.

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Abstract

In this paper we explore the effect of emotion on statistical reasoning. We employed a base rates task to examine reliance on statistical information in the presence of congruent or incongruent anecdotal information. The impact of emotional content on statistical reasoning was investigated in controls andvictims of sexual abuse. Two types of emotional contents were used, one generally emotional, and one related to sexual abuse. The latter category was included to investigate the effect of semantically identical stimuli that could potentially produce different levels of emotion in the victim and control groups. For control participants, emotional contents were associated with decreased use of statistical information and increased use of anecdotal information compared to neutral contents. Results from the victims group showed this effect to be increased for contents related to sexual abuse, suggesting that the effect is linked to the emotional connotation rather than semantic content. Victims perceived contents relating to theirexperience as more emotional and this was associated with specific reasoning impairments for these topics.

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Type of resource:
Content type:
Publication type:
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Published date:
Volume:
25
Start page:
277
End page:
282
Access state:
Active

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Record metadata

Manchester eScholar ID:
uk-ac-man-scw:184652
Created by:
Mansell, Warren
Created:
8th January, 2013, 16:31:07
Last modified by:
Mansell, Warren
Last modified:
9th October, 2013, 15:58:24

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