A many-analysts approach to the relation between religiosity and well-being

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Date

2022

Authors

Hoogeveen, Suzanne
Sarafoglou, Alexandra
Aczel, Balazs
Aditya, Yonathan
Alayan, Alexandra J.
Allen, Peter J.
Altay, Sacha

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Routledge Journals, Taylor & Francis Ltd

Open Access Color

HYBRID

Green Open Access

Yes

OpenAIRE Downloads

12

OpenAIRE Views

15

Publicly Funded

No
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Abstract

The relation between religiosity and well-being is one of the most researched topics in the psychology of religion, yet the directionality and robustness of the effect remains debated. Here, we adopted a many-analysts approach to assess the robustness of this relation based on a new cross-cultural dataset (N = 10, 535 participants from 24 countries). We recruited 120 analysis teams to investigate (1) whether religious people self-report higher well-being, and (2) whether the relation between religiosity and self-reported well-being depends on perceived cultural norms of religion (i.e., whether it is considered normal and desirable to be religious in a given country). In a two-stage procedure, the teams first created an analysis plan and then executed their planned analysis on the data. For the first research question, all but 3 teams reported positive effect sizes with credible/confidence intervals excluding zero (median reported beta = 0.120). For the second research question, this was the case for 65% of the teams (median reported beta = 0.039). While most teams applied (multilevel) linear regression models, there was considerable variability in the choice of items used to construct the independent variables, the dependent variable, and the included covariates.

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Keywords

Mental-Health, People Happy, Life, Spirituality, Replication, Involvement, Perspective, Consensus, Happiness, Culture, Mental-Health, People Happy, Life, Spirituality, Replication, Involvement, Perspective, Health, Consensus, many analysts, Happiness, open science, Culture, religion, INVOLVEMENT, Health; many analysts; open science; religion, Consensus, 330, Happiness, Culture, 150, Replication, BF, HN, Religionsvetenskap, Social Development, SPIRITUALITY, Religious Studies, CULTURE, Life, open science, Psychology, BV, Spirituality, PERSPECTIVE, HAPPINESS, openscience, PEOPLE HAPPY, Arts & Humanities, health, 200, many analyst, 301, Communication and Media, 5205 Social and personality psychology, Religion, LIFE, Health, People Happy, religion, [SCCO.PSYC]Cognitive science/Psychology, Perspective, REPLICATION, 5004 Religious studies, many analysts, Many analysts, Open science, Involvement, CONSENSUS, MENTAL-HEALTH, Mental-Health

Fields of Science

Citation

WoS Q

N/A

Scopus Q

Q1
OpenCitations Logo
OpenCitations Citation Count
45

Source

Religion Brain & Behavior

Volume

13

Issue

Start Page

237

End Page

283
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Citations

CrossRef : 23

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Mendeley Readers : 132

SCOPUS™ Citations

81

checked on Feb 14, 2026

Web of Science™ Citations

82

checked on Feb 14, 2026

Page Views

3

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Downloads

86

checked on Feb 14, 2026

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