Abstract

The Epistemic Preference Indicator (EPI; Eigenberger, Critchley, & Sealander, 2007) measures a dual-process cognitive model comprising Intellective (IP) and Default (DP) processing. These two habitual thinking styles are defined by complex, effortful thinking (IP) and effortless, expedient thinking (DP). The current study examined the response format and content validity of the EPI. An eight-item alternative (EPI-R) was found to perform similarly to the original measure, displaying adequate explanatory power, reliability and content validity.

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