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"阅读一段文学小说真的能提高心理理论吗?一项复制尝试":对 Panero 等人(2016 年)的更正。

"Does reading a single passage of literary fiction really improve theory of mind? An attempt at replication": Correction to Panero et al. (2016).

出版信息

J Pers Soc Psychol. 2016 Nov;111(5):e55. doi: 10.1037/pspa0000067.

Abstract

Reports an error in "Does Reading a Single Passage of Literary Fiction Really Improve Theory of Mind? An Attempt at Replication" by Maria Eugenia Panero, Deena Skolnick Weisberg, Jessica Black, Thalia R. Goldstein, Jennifer L. Barnes, Hiram Brownell and Ellen Winner (, Advanced Online Publication, Sep 19, 2016, np). In the article, due to an error in stimulus construction, four items (three authors, one foil) were omitted from the ART presented to all participants tested by Research Group 1. These omissions do not undermine the results in the primary analyses, which all included ART and ART Condition (as covariates). Any variation across research groups, including this difference in reading exposure measurement, is accounted for in the multilevel analyses. Therefore, the Table 2 title should appear as Reading the Mind in the Eyes Test (RMET) Scores by Condition and Overall Unadjusted Means for the Current Study and Kidd and Castano (2013), as Well as the Zero-Order Pearson's Correlations Between RMET and ART Scores Overall and by Condition. The ART data columns should be deleted, and the table note should begin as follows: RMET scores were transformed to correct for skew prior to correlational analyses. The section title above the Discussion section should appear as Comparison of Our RMET Scores to Kidd and Castano Data, with the first two sentences appearing as follows: To determine whether the responses in our sample were similar to what Kidd and Castano (2013) found, we compared our mean performance on the RMET to theirs. Our grand mean (26.28) was significantly higher than theirs (25.18), (1=, 374) = 3.71, < .001, d = 0.21. All versions of this article have been corrected. (The following abstract of the original article appeared in record 2016-44825-001.) Fiction simulates the social world and invites us into the minds of characters. This has led various researchers to suggest that reading fiction improves our understanding of others' cognitive and emotional states. Kidd and Castano (2013) received a great deal of attention by providing support for this claim. Their article reported that reading segments of literary fiction (but not popular fiction or nonfiction) immediately and significantly improved performance on the Reading the Mind in the Eyes Test (RMET), an advanced theory-of-mind test. Here we report a replication attempt by 3 independent research groups, with 792 participants randomly assigned to 1 of 4 conditions (literary fiction, popular fiction, nonfiction, and no reading). In contrast to Kidd and Castano (2013), we found no significant advantage in RMET scores for literary fiction compared to any of the other conditions. However, as in Kidd and Castano and previous research, the Author Recognition Test, a measure of lifetime exposure to fiction, consistently predicted RMET scores across conditions. We conclude that the most plausible link between reading fiction and theory of mind is either that individuals with strong theory of mind are drawn to fiction and/or that a lifetime of reading gradually strengthens theory of mind, but other variables, such as verbal ability, may also be at play. (PsycINFO Database Record

摘要

报告了 Maria Eugenia Panero、Deena Skolnick Weisberg、Jessica Black、Thalia R. Goldstein、Jennifer L. Barnes、Hiram Brownell 和 Ellen Winner 发表的“阅读单篇文学小说真的能提高心理理论吗?一项尝试复制的研究”(,在线提前发布,2016 年 9 月 19 日,np)中的错误。在这篇文章中,由于刺激构建错误,第一组研究人员(Research Group 1)测试的所有参与者的 ART 中省略了四个项目(三个作者,一个干扰)。这些遗漏并没有破坏主要分析的结果,所有主要分析都包括了 ART 和 ART 条件(作为协变量)。任何研究小组之间的差异,包括阅读暴露测量的这种差异,都在多层次分析中得到了考虑。因此,表 2 的标题应显示为当前研究和 Kidd 和 Castano(2013)的条件和总体未调整的阅读心理测验(RMET)分数,以及 RMET 和 ART 分数的零阶皮尔逊相关,总体和条件。ART 数据列应被删除,表注应如下开始:RMET 分数在相关分析之前被转换为纠正偏斜。讨论部分上方的标题应显示为“我们的 RMET 分数与 Kidd 和 Castano 数据的比较”,前两句话应如下:为了确定我们样本中的反应是否与 Kidd 和 Castano(2013)的发现相似,我们将我们在 RMET 上的平均表现与他们的进行了比较。我们的总平均值(26.28)明显高于他们的(25.18),(1=,374)= 3.71,<.001,d = 0.21。所有版本的这篇文章都已经被纠正了。(原始文章的摘要如下 2016-44825-001 出现。)小说模拟了社会世界,邀请我们进入角色的内心世界。这导致各种研究人员提出,阅读小说可以提高我们对他人认知和情绪状态的理解。Kidd 和 Castano(2013)的研究得到了广泛关注,他们支持了这一观点。他们的文章报告说,阅读文学小说(但不是流行小说或非小说)片段会立即显著提高阅读心理测验(RMET)的表现,这是一种先进的心理理论测试。在这里,我们报告了 3 个独立研究小组的复制尝试,792 名参与者被随机分配到 4 个条件之一(文学小说、流行小说、非小说和不阅读)。与 Kidd 和 Castano(2013)不同,我们发现文学小说与其他任何条件相比,在 RMET 分数上都没有明显优势。然而,与 Kidd 和 Castano 以及之前的研究一样,作者识别测试,一种对小说的终生暴露的衡量标准,在所有条件下都一致地预测了 RMET 分数。我们的结论是,阅读小说和心理理论之间最合理的联系是,具有强大心理理论的人会被小说所吸引,或者终生阅读逐渐增强心理理论,但其他变量,如语言能力,也可能在起作用。(PsycINFO 数据库记录)

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