Why you might want to ignore everything I post on this blog, part 3:

.

The sample of people who volunteer for studies may not not representative:

The central purpose of the present research is to provide a review of social value orientation (i.e., prosocial, individualistic, and competitive orientation), a construct measured with methods rooted in game theory (i.e., decomposed games). Also, we examine its ability to predict volunteering in psychology experiments. Consistent with hypotheses, Study 1 revealed that prosocials are more likely to volunteer in psychological experiments than do individualists and competitors. Study 2 replicated these findings, and revealed also that social value orientation was strongly linked to the academic study they chose. In particular, among psychology students, prosocials (57%) was the largest group, followed by individualists (37%), and only a few competitors (6%); in contrast, among economics students, individualists appeared largest (47%), followed by prosocials (36%), and still a fairly sizeable percentage of competitors (17%). It is concluded that psychologists and economists tend to rely on samples (from their participant pools) that may systematically differ in terms of motivation and beliefs that are associated with differences in prosociality, selfishness, and competition.

Source: “Who volunteers in psychology experiments? An empirical review of prosocial motivation in volunteering” from Personality and Individual Differences

Other reasons to ignore everything I post are here and here.

You may want to check out Kathryn Schulz’s new book Being Wrong: Adventures in the Margin of Error.

Related posts:

Things you didn’t know about lies, liars and detecting lies

A few more things pop psychology has been wrong about:

Does getting it wrong help you get it right?

When should we trust someone’s reputation and when should we ignore it?:

What leads us to trust people?

You should follow me on Twitter here. You can also subscribe to the blog’s feed or follow on Facebook. If you want to help support the blog, please do your Amazon shopping via this link. Here are the site’s most popular posts of all time.

Share

Subscribe to the newsletter