Title

Confirmation Bias through Selective Overweighting of Choice-Consistent Evidence

Summary

This article explores how prior choices can bias their interpretation of new evidence, a phenomenon known as confirmation bias. The researchers developed a task to investigate how an initial decision affects the subsequent processing of information, finding that evidence consistent with a person’s initial choice is processed more efficiently. Their findings suggest that this “choice-induced gain change,” where selective attention is directed toward confirming information, affects both perceptual and numerical decisions, possibly due to feedback mechanisms in the brain.

 

 

َAuthor

Talluri, B. C., Urai, A. E., Tsetsos, K., Usher, M., & Donner, T. H.

Year

2018

َThematic Area

Communication Studies

Topic

Misinformation, disinformation, and malinformation

Country

Global

Region

Misinformation Combatting

Misinformation Source

Place Published

APA 7th End Text Citation

Talluri, B. C., Urai, A. E., Tsetsos, K., Usher, M., & Donner, T. H. (2018). Confirmation bias through selective overweighting of choice-consistent evidence. Journal of Neuroscience, 28(19), 3128-3135.e8.. http://10.1016/j.cub.2018.07.052