“…Further, in terms of how to measure and model individual-level and cross-cultural variation in mental representations (e.g., beliefs, attitudes, values), we want to stress that the present work has ramifications that reach beyond the scholarly field in which the presented case study was conceived. For instance, there is arguably untapped potential in employing free-list tasks in measuring not only religious beliefs, but also beliefs and attitudes on science (e.g., Bendixen, 2020), morality (e.g., Purzycki, Pisor, et al, 2018;White & Norenzayan, 2021), health (e.g., Quinlan, 2017), as well as political, ideological, and economic issues (e.g., Bendixen, 2019;White & Norenzayan, 2021), disciplinary areas in which item response scales are extremely common but oftentimes not externally or cross-task verified. Here too, the free-list task could serve as a convenient measure of cross-task robustness or as a methodological tool to explore whether these two tasks indeed tap into distinct cognitive processes.…”