Religiosity is associated with less prediction of the typical: An event-related brain potential study

Abstract

Why are some people more religious than others? According to one hypothesis, people who strongly seek definitive explanations for situations with incomplete information are more likely to be religious. According to a different hypothesis, individuals with smaller "prediction error" responses to unexpected stimuli are more likely to discount evidence contradicting religious beliefs, predisposing them to maintain such beliefs. We sought neurophysiological evidence for these hypotheses using the N400 event-related potential (ERP), which is smaller to more contextually expected stimuli, reflecting prediction of probable completions for meaningful situations. We recorded ERPs from participants viewing category definitions followed by high-typicality category exemplar (HTE), low-typicality exemplar (LTE), or non-exemplar (NE) words. As expected, N400s were largest for NEs, intermediate for LTEs, and smallest for HTEs. Religiosity correlated with smaller N400 amplitude differences between HTEs and both LTEs and NEs. Less strong prediction of probable stimuli based on prior information may predispose to religiosity.

Description

Keywords

religious beliefs, semantic memory, prediction, individual differences, event-related potentials, psychology and religion

Citation

Kiang, M., Cupid, J., Ahmed, S., Lepock, J. R., & Girard, T. A. (2020). Religiosity is associated with less prediction of the typical: an eventrelated brain potential study. Biological Psychology, 107884.

DOI

10.1016/j.biopsycho.2020.107884

ISSN

03010511

Creative Commons

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International

Items in TSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.