Are psi researchers more like lay believers or sceptics?

Are psi researchers more like lay believers or sceptics?

A study shows that academics who work with psi differ from lay psi individuals, but not from sceptics, in actively open-minded thinking. Despite their firm belief in psi phenomena, psi researchers demonstrate a commitment to sound reasoning about evidence that is no different from that of sceptics.

Psi phenomena, such as extra-sensory perception (the purported ability to perceive information without using one’s physical senses) or psychokinesis (the supposed influence of mental processes on physical systems), have long captivated the interest and curiosity of humanity, and belief in psi is relatively high among the general population.

However, this belief is often viewed with scepticism and dismissed as irrational and unscientific, particularly among academics. This is despite academic research on psi phenomena dating back to the 19th century and continuing today with academic studies published in psychology and neuroscience journals.

In stark contrast to academics in general, most researchers in the field of psi seem to endorse the reality of psi. But are they that different from sceptics with similar academic backgrounds in considering inconsistent evidence and in their motivation to search for the "correct" answer? And concerning lay believers, do psi researchers differ in how they approach knowledge, evidence, and ambiguity?

In the article “Cognitive styles and psi: psi researchers are more similar to skeptics than to lay believers”, published in the scientific journal Frontiers in Psychology in June, Marieta Pehlivanova and co-authors report that they investigated the differences in cognitive styles among four heterogeneous groups regarding belief in psi, attitudes toward and involvement in related research: academic psi researchers, lay psi believers, academic sceptics and lay sceptics.

With the support of the BIAL Foundation, the researchers from the University of Virginia School of Medicine (USA) aimed in this study to test the hypothesis that academic psi researchers may exhibit different cognitive styles to lay individuals interested in psi, but similar to sceptics. Unsurprisingly, they found that, given their different engagement with psi phenomena, psi researchers reported significantly greater belief in and perceived experience with psi phenomena compared to academic sceptics, confirming prior findings.

However, the results also showed that, as hypothesized, psi researchers and academic sceptics showed no difference in the cognitive styles of actively open-minded thinking and the need for cognitive closure. On the other hand, psi researchers showed greater actively open-minded thinking compared to lay believers, suggesting that they are more willing to consider evidence contradicting their beliefs.

Together, these findings suggest that "these two groups (academic psi researchers and academic sceptics), which are philosophically and empirically at odds with each other regarding evidence for psi phenomena, do not differ in their endorsement of the principles of 'good' thinking about evidence", emphasises Marieta Pehlivanova.

Learn more about the project “212/20 - Comparing cognitive styles among parapsychology researchers, psi-believers, and skeptics” here.

 

 


Are psi researchers more like lay believers or sceptics?

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