Judgment and Decision Making (Sep 2018)

Reversing the causal arrow: Incidence and properties of negative backward magical contagion in Americans

  • Paul Rozin,
  • Christopher Dunn,
  • Natalie Fedotova

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1017/S1930297500008718
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13
pp. 441 – 450

Abstract

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Backward magical contagion describes instances in which individuals (sources) express discomfort or pleasure when something connected to them (medium; e.g., hair, a diary) falls into the possession of a negatively- or positively-perceived individual (recipient). The reaction seems illogical, since it is made clear that the source will never experience the object again, and the psychological effect appears to reverse the standard forward model of causality. Backward magical contagion was originally believed to be a belief held only within traditional cultures. Two studies examined negative backward contagion in adult Americans in online surveys. Study 1 indicated that backward contagion effects occur commonly, particularly when a recipient knows of the medium’s source. Study 2 showed that backward contagion effects tend to be neutralized when the recipient burns the object, as opposed to just possessing it or discarding it. Ironically, in traditional cultures, burning is a particularly potent cause of backward contagion.

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