Title of article :
Religion and action control: Faith-specific modulation of the Simon effect but not Stop-Signal performance
Author/Authors :
Hommel، نويسنده , , Bernhard and Colzato، نويسنده , , Lorenza S. and Scorolli، نويسنده , , Claudia and Borghi، نويسنده , , Anna M. and van den Wildenberg، نويسنده , , Wery P.M. and Scorolli، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Abstract :
Previous findings suggest that religion has a specific impact on attentional processes. Here we show that religion also affects action control. Experiment 1 compared Dutch Calvinists and Dutch atheists, matched for age, sex, intelligence, education, and cultural and socio-economic background, and Experiment 2 compared Italian Catholics with matched Italian seculars. As expected, Calvinists showed a smaller and Catholics a larger Simon effect than nonbelievers, while performance of the groups was comparable in the Stop-Signal task. This pattern suggests that religions emphasizing individualism or collectivism affects action control in specific ways, presumably by inducing chronic biases towards a more “exclusive” or “inclusive” style of decision-making. Interestingly, there was no evidence that religious practice affects inhibitory skills.
Keywords :
Simon effect , Stop-signal task , Calvinism , Catholicism , RELIGION , attention
Journal title :
Cognition
Journal title :
Cognition