Changing minds about minds: evidence that people are too sceptical about animal sentience
Changing minds about minds: evidence that people are too sceptical about animal sentience
Our relationships with other animals are governed by how we view their capacity for sentience and suffering. However, there is currently little agreement as to whether people's beliefs about animal minds are largely accurate or inaccurate. We used an innovative task to examine how people update their beliefs in response to noisy but informative clues about animal minds. This allowed us to compare participants' posterior beliefs to what a normative participant ought to believe if they conform to Bayes' theorem. Five studies (four pre-registered; n = 2417) found that participants shifted their beliefs too far in response to clues that suggested animals do not have minds (i.e., overshooting what a normative participant ought to believe), but not far enough in response to clues that suggested animals have minds (i.e., falling short of what a normative participant ought to believe). A final study demonstrated that this effect was attenuated when humans were the targets of belief. The findings demonstrate that people underestimate animal minds in a way that can be said to be inaccurate and highlight the role of belief updating in downplaying evidence of animal minds. The findings are discussed in relation to speciesist beliefs about the supremacy of humans over animals.
Leach, Stefan
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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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12 September 2022
Leach, Stefan
6bdc5639-c135-46b8-bcf9-2dd00646ee9a
Sutton, Robbie M.
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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.
(2022)
Changing minds about minds: evidence that people are too sceptical about animal sentience.
Cognition, 230, [105263].
(doi:10.1016/j.cognition.2022.105263).
Abstract
Our relationships with other animals are governed by how we view their capacity for sentience and suffering. However, there is currently little agreement as to whether people's beliefs about animal minds are largely accurate or inaccurate. We used an innovative task to examine how people update their beliefs in response to noisy but informative clues about animal minds. This allowed us to compare participants' posterior beliefs to what a normative participant ought to believe if they conform to Bayes' theorem. Five studies (four pre-registered; n = 2417) found that participants shifted their beliefs too far in response to clues that suggested animals do not have minds (i.e., overshooting what a normative participant ought to believe), but not far enough in response to clues that suggested animals have minds (i.e., falling short of what a normative participant ought to believe). A final study demonstrated that this effect was attenuated when humans were the targets of belief. The findings demonstrate that people underestimate animal minds in a way that can be said to be inaccurate and highlight the role of belief updating in downplaying evidence of animal minds. The findings are discussed in relation to speciesist beliefs about the supremacy of humans over animals.
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Accepted/In Press date: 23 August 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 12 September 2022
Published date: 12 September 2022
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Local EPrints ID: 505139
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505139
ISSN: 0010-0277
PURE UUID: 20ab0a1a-f62d-400a-9a75-58d1e78ffd05
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Date deposited: 30 Sep 2025 16:54
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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