Publication Type

Journal Article

Version

acceptedVersion

Publication Date

6-2021

Abstract

Although humans are intuitive dualists, little is known about whether they hold lay beliefs about the origins or sources of their intuitive perceptions of what is physical and what is mental. Drawing on theories of the sources of phenomenological experiences, we examined if people hold beliefs about the internal and social origins of judments that their experiences are physical or mental. In Study 1, participants provided physical or mental judgments about a range of personal experiences, and reported relying on both internal (i.e., examining own body and thoughts) and social (i.e., observing others) sources as information for their judgments. To examine the actual reliance on such information, in two additional studies, participants were randomly assigned to receive feedback about whether a target experience was physical or mental in nature, ostensibly from an internal source in Study 2 and a social source in Study 3. Following this feedback, participants recounted a personal instance of the target experience and subsequently judged its physical or mental nature. Participants’ judgments were found to align with feedback from both internal and social sources. Overall, these findings demonstrate that people do hold lay beliefs about the internal and social origins of physical and mental perceptions, and information from these sources do shape judgments of their own experiences. Implications for the science of lay theories, as well as the applied domains of clinical and health psychology are discussed.

Keywords

Health psychology, Judgments, Somatic, Sources of information

Discipline

Applied Behavior Analysis | Social Psychology

Research Areas

Psychology

Publication

Psychology of Consciousness: Theory, Research, and Practice

First Page

1

Last Page

14

ISSN

2326-5523

Identifier

10.1037/cns0000282

Publisher

APA

Copyright Owner and License

Authors

Additional URL

https://doi.org/10.1037/cns0000282

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