Drawing attention to previous studies can reduce confidence in a new research finding, even when confidence should increase

Author:

Radell Milen L.1ORCID,Thompson W. Burt1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, Niagara University, Lewiston, NY, USA

Abstract

People often learn of new scientific findings from brief news reports, and may discount or ignore prior research, potentially contributing to misunderstanding of findings. In this preregistered study, we investigated how people interpret a brief news report on a new drug for weight loss. Participants read an article that either highlighted the importance of prior research when judging the drug’s effectiveness, or made no mention of this issue. For articles describing no prior research, mean confidence in the drug was 62%. For articles that noted prior research was conducted, confidence increased as the proportion of studies with positive findings increased. When prior research was highlighted, confidence decreased by a small amount, even when it should have increased (i.e., even when most of the evidence supported the drug’s effectiveness). Thus, people’s judgements were more sceptical, but not necessarily more accurate. Judgements were not affected by education level, statistics experience, or personal relevance of the research topic.

Funder

Niagara University

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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