Are we smart enough to remember how smart animals are?
Are we smart enough to remember how smart animals are?
Some theoretical perspectives suggest people overestimate animals’ mental capacities (anthropomorphism), while others suggest the reverse (mind-denial). However, studies have generally not employed objective criteria against which the accuracy or appropriateness of people's judgments about animals can be tested. We employed memory paradigms, in which judgments are clearly right or wrong, in nine experiments (eight preregistered; n = 3,162). When tested shortly after exposure, meat-eaters’ memory about companion animals (e.g., dogs) but not food animals (e.g., pigs) showed an anthropomorphic bias: they remembered more information consistent with animals having versus lacking a mind (Experiments 1–4). Vegetarians' and vegans' memory, on the other hand, consistently showed an anthropomorphic bias regarding food and companion animals alike (Experiments 5 and 6). When tested a week after exposure, both those who eat meat and those who do not showed signs of shifting toward a mind-denying bias (Experiments 2, 3, and 6). These biases had important consequences for beliefs about animal minds. Inducing mind-denying memory biases caused participants to see animals as possessing less sophisticated minds (Experiments 7–9). The work demonstrates that memories concerning animals’ minds can depart predictably from reality and that such departures can contribute to biased evaluations of their mental capacities.
2138–2159
Leach, Stefan
6bdc5639-c135-46b8-bcf9-2dd00646ee9a
Sutton, Robbie M.
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Dhont, Kristof
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Douglas, Karen M.
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Bergström, Zara M.
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1 August 2023
Leach, Stefan
6bdc5639-c135-46b8-bcf9-2dd00646ee9a
Sutton, Robbie M.
c5c423f8-fc77-4778-9666-8fb0c1fc42b0
Dhont, Kristof
25b2d39a-2ad1-4546-b507-76f6aa5af01b
Douglas, Karen M.
78c9d691-a5f2-414e-a952-20ce83b95f13
Bergström, Zara M.
7508177d-02f1-44d2-9bee-1f36be55b56f
Leach, Stefan, Sutton, Robbie M., Dhont, Kristof, Douglas, Karen M. and Bergström, Zara M.
(2023)
Are we smart enough to remember how smart animals are?
Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 152 (8), .
(doi:10.1037/xge0001401).
Abstract
Some theoretical perspectives suggest people overestimate animals’ mental capacities (anthropomorphism), while others suggest the reverse (mind-denial). However, studies have generally not employed objective criteria against which the accuracy or appropriateness of people's judgments about animals can be tested. We employed memory paradigms, in which judgments are clearly right or wrong, in nine experiments (eight preregistered; n = 3,162). When tested shortly after exposure, meat-eaters’ memory about companion animals (e.g., dogs) but not food animals (e.g., pigs) showed an anthropomorphic bias: they remembered more information consistent with animals having versus lacking a mind (Experiments 1–4). Vegetarians' and vegans' memory, on the other hand, consistently showed an anthropomorphic bias regarding food and companion animals alike (Experiments 5 and 6). When tested a week after exposure, both those who eat meat and those who do not showed signs of shifting toward a mind-denying bias (Experiments 2, 3, and 6). These biases had important consequences for beliefs about animal minds. Inducing mind-denying memory biases caused participants to see animals as possessing less sophisticated minds (Experiments 7–9). The work demonstrates that memories concerning animals’ minds can depart predictably from reality and that such departures can contribute to biased evaluations of their mental capacities.
Text
2023-63358-001
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Accepted/In Press date: 3 February 2023
Published date: 1 August 2023
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 505138
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505138
ISSN: 0096-3445
PURE UUID: d2444e2b-585f-465d-98b2-c8596f95fa42
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Date deposited: 30 Sep 2025 16:53
Last modified: 01 Oct 2025 02:19
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Author:
Stefan Leach
Author:
Robbie M. Sutton
Author:
Kristof Dhont
Author:
Karen M. Douglas
Author:
Zara M. Bergström
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