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An investigation of belief-bias and logicality in reasoning with emotional contents

Eliades, M., Mansell, W., Stewart, A., & and Blanchette, I

Thinking and Reasoning. 2012;18:461-479.

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Abstract

The effects of emotion and belief on logicality have been examined independently in the literature. The aim of this paper is to explore the possible effect of emotion on both logicality and belief-bias. We also examined the nature of the belief-bias associated with emotion in terms of Type 1 versus Type 2 processes. In two studies, we employed a categorical syllogisms task to compare reasoning about emotional and neutral contents. Study 1 was conducted with women from the general population and Study 2 included victims of sexual abuse in addition to control participants. The categorical syllogisms were manipulated in terms of logical validity (valid/invalid), believability (believable/unbelievable) and content type (generally emotional/sexual abuse-specific/neutral). The results from control participants and victims were in line with the literature, indicating that reasoning about emotional contents is associated with decreased logicality compared to neutral contents. We also found some evidence that emotion leads to an increase in Type 1 belief-bias. These results indicate that belief-bias effects, specifically those underlined by Type 1 processes, may well be one of the factors modulating the effect of emotion on logicality.

Keyword(s)

Emotion Belief-bias Deductive reasoning Dual-system accounts of reasoning

Bibliographic metadata

Type of resource:
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Publication type:
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Published date:
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Volume:
18
Start page:
461
End page:
479
Access state:
Active

Institutional metadata

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Record metadata

Manchester eScholar ID:
uk-ac-man-scw:165140
Created by:
Mansell, Warren
Created:
19th July, 2012, 11:37:41
Last modified by:
Mansell, Warren
Last modified:
8th January, 2013, 16:12:35

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