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Zonghua Shi; Jennifer Shearon; Elena M. Kaufman; Andy Y. Lu; Alexis M. Suarez; Natalie M. Rogler; Miranda R. Miller; Emily R. Cohen-Shikora – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2025
The Illusory Truth Effect (ITE) is a cognitive bias wherein participants rate repeated statements as more truthful relative to new statements. Although this effect may be less adaptive in our current media climate, where repeated information can circulate easily, few studies have examined how to mitigate or reduce it. In the current studies, we…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Bias, Intervention, Evaluative Thinking
Gibbons, Jeffrey A.; Dunlap, Spencer; Friedmann, Emma; Dayton, Clare; Rocha, Gabriela – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2022
Unpleasant affect fades faster than pleasant affect, and this phenomenon is referred to as the fading affect bias (FAB). The FAB is moderated and mediated by many variables, including rehearsal and memory specificity, and researchers have emphasized the importance of memory for the FAB, but research has not evaluated the link of the FAB to…
Descriptors: Bias, Memory, Social Media, Diaries
Martins, Ana P. G.; Köbrich, Moritz V.; Carstengerdes, Nils; Biella, Marcus – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2023
The objective of the present study was to examine if the Outcome Bias also occurs in pilots flying under instrument flight rules (IFR). In a scenario-based survey, 60 pilots evaluated weather-related decisions made by hypothetical pilots. Participants rated the decisions as better, less risky, and regarded the probability that they would have made…
Descriptors: Bias, Air Transportation, Flight Training, Simulation
Gilhooly, Ken J.; Sleeman, Derek H. – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2022
Inconsistency in real-world judgments can cause random unfairness, injustice and misallocation of resources. In their recent monograph Kahneman, Sibony, and Sunstein (2021) analyse judgment inconsistency or "Noise," examine its sources and propose remedies. In this commentary on Kahneman et al., we reflect on the major concepts (such as…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Bias, Error Patterns, Thinking Skills
Camilleri, Adrian R.; Sah, Sunita – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2021
The status quo bias (SQB) is the tendency to prefer the current state of affairs. We investigated if experts (physicians) fall prey to the SQB when making decisions in their area of expertise and, if so, whether the SQB is reduced or amplified for experts compared to non-experts. We presented 302 physicians and 733 members of the general…
Descriptors: Bias, Physicians, Decision Making, Medical Services
Oberlader, Verena A.; Quinten, Laura; Banse, Rainer; Volbert, Renate; Schmidt, Alexander F.; Schönbrodt, Felix D. – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2021
Content-based techniques for credibility assessment (Criteria-Based Content Analysis [CBCA], Reality Monitoring [RM]) have been shown to distinguish between experience-based and fabricated statements in previous meta-analyses. New simulations raised the question whether these results are reliable revealing that using meta-analytic methods on…
Descriptors: Credibility, Meta Analysis, Bias, Validity
Bond, Gary D.; Speller, Lassiter F.; Jiménez, Jaqueline Coeto; Smith, Danielle; Marin, Perla G.; Greenham, Melanie B.; Holman, Rebecka D.; Varela, Edward – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2022
Fading affect bias (FAB) is a phenomenon wherein the intensity of negative emotions associated with an autobiographical memory decrease more rapidly than the intensity of positive emotions. The present study had three aims: (1) to determine whether FAB could be replicated in extreme event memories (the loss of loved ones) in the Mexican culture;…
Descriptors: Bias, Foreign Countries, Psychological Patterns, Death
Derksen, Daniel G.; Giroux, Megan E.; Connolly, Deborah A.; Newman, Eryn J.; Bernstein, Daniel M. – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2020
Nonprobative but related photos can increase the perceived truth value of statements relative to when no photo is presented ("truthiness"). In two experiments, we tested whether truthiness generalizes to credibility judgments in a forensic context. Participants read short vignettes in which a witness viewed an offence. The vignettes were…
Descriptors: Photography, Bias, Accuracy, Credibility
Siler, Jessica; Hamilton, Kristy A.; Benjamin, Aaron S. – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2022
It is difficult to monitor whether information was originally retrieved internally, from our own memory, or externally, from another person or a device. We report two experiments that examined whether people were more likely to confuse prior access to information on a smartphone with accessing their own knowledge. Participants were experimentally…
Descriptors: Handheld Devices, Information Retrieval, Recall (Psychology), Memory
Wilson, Cristina G.; Shipley, Thomas F.; Davatzes, Alexandra K. – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2020
Previous research demonstrates that domain experts, like ordinary participant populations, are vulnerable to decision bias. Here, we examine susceptibility to bias amongst expert field scientists. Field scientists operate in less predictable environments than other experts, and feedback on the consequences of their decisions is often unclear or…
Descriptors: Bias, Expertise, Scientists, Decision Making
Saltor, Joan; Barberia, Itxaso; Rodríguez-Ferreiro, Javier – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2023
Acceptance of fake news is probably modulated by an intricate interplay of social, cultural, and political factors. In this study, we investigated whether individual-level cognitive factors related to thinking and decision making could influence the tendency to accept fake news. A group of volunteers responded to a COVID-19-related fake news…
Descriptors: Volunteers, COVID-19, Pandemics, Deception
Holt, Glenys A.; Palmer, Matthew A. – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2021
Wrongful conviction statistics suggest that jurors pay little heed to the quality of confession evidence when making verdict decisions. However, recent research indicates that confession inconsistencies may sometimes reduce perception of suspect guilt. Drawing on theoretical frameworks of attribution theory, correspondence bias, and the story…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Justice, Beliefs, Criminals
Bagnis, Arianna; Cremonini, Valeria; Pasi, Eleonora; Pasquinelli, Gianandrea; Rubbi, Ivan; Russo, Paolo Maria; Mattarozzi, Katia – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2021
Associations between facial appearance and hiring decisions are well-documented within job literature as a source of decision misjudgment with economic and human costs. Notwithstanding, this aspect is yet to be investigated in healthcare. We collected 90 pictures of new-graduates nurses faces to be judged on different facial appearance-based…
Descriptors: Bias, Health Services, Familiarity, Personnel Selection
Keskin, Gizem; Baker, Alysha; Lloyd, E. Paige; Krank, Liliana; ten Brinke, Leanne – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2023
Despite the high incidence of sexual assault, doubt about allegations is common. Previous research suggests that victims expressing positive or no emotion are perceived as less credible than those expressing negative emotions. However, little is known about which specific negative emotional expressions contribute to credibility in this context. In…
Descriptors: Credibility, Rape, Psychological Patterns, Vignettes
Okanda, Mako; Taniguchi, Kosuke – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2020
This study investigated whether 2- to 6-year-old children exhibit a response bias to questions pertaining to the results of sharing objects that should attract their interest. An experimenter distributed four objects between herself/himself and a child, equally or unequally (more to the child or more to the experimenter) and asked the child yes-no…
Descriptors: Young Children, Responses, Bias, Age Differences