Hadjichristidis Constantinos, Geipel Janet, Surian Luca
1 Department of Economics and Management, University of Trento, Trento, Italy.
2 Centre for Decision Research, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK.
Q J Exp Psychol (Hove). 2019 Jan;72(1):18-28. doi: 10.1080/17470218.2017.1371780. Epub 2018 Jan 1.
In three studies, we found that reading information in a foreign language can suppress common superstitious beliefs. Participants read scenarios in either their native or a foreign language. In each scenario, participants were asked to imagine performing an action (e.g., submitting a job application) under a superstitious circumstance (e.g., broken mirror, four-leaf clover) and to rate how they would feel. Overall, foreign language prompted less negative feelings towards bad-luck scenarios and less positive feelings towards good-luck scenarios, while it exerted no influence on non-superstitious, control scenarios. We attribute these findings to language-dependent memory. Superstitious beliefs are typically acquired and used in contexts involving the native language. As a result, the native language evokes them more forcefully than a foreign language.
在三项研究中,我们发现阅读外语信息可以抑制常见的迷信观念。参与者阅读用母语或外语呈现的情景。在每个情景中,要求参与者想象在一个迷信情境(如镜子破碎、四叶草)下执行一个动作(如提交求职申请),并对他们的感受进行评分。总体而言,外语会促使人们对厄运情景产生较少的负面情绪,对好运情景产生较少的正面情绪,而对外语对非迷信的对照情景没有影响。我们将这些发现归因于语言依赖记忆。迷信观念通常是在涉及母语的情境中习得和使用的。因此,母语比外语更能有力地唤起这些观念。