Asking simultaneously about truth and familiarity may disrupt truth effects

Tell me something that sounds familiar and I will believe it to be true. This is a statement that we should believe because it summarizes a well-documented and empirically supported effect: the illusion of truth effect (see Dechêne, Stahl, Hansen, & Wänke, 2010 for a review). The fact is we are more likely to believe in a statement if we have been previously exposed to it (e.g., Bacon, 1979; Hasher, Goldstein, & Toppino, 1977). Repetition increases truth-value, generating the illusion that repeated statements are more valid than information we never heard or read before. A general assumption of the explanations of the truth effect is that the subjective experience of processing a familiar statement is interpreted as informing about the validity of the statement (see Dechêne et al., 2010). This implies that a process of misattribution underlies repetition’s effect on judgments of truth (e.g., Bornstein & D’Agostino, 1994; Mandler, Nakamura, & Van Zandt, 1987; Schwarz & Clore, 1983). In this paper we present an experiment that tests such misattribution process by making more or less explicit the real source of the feeling of familiarity with the statements. In this way we test whether illusions of truth decrease when it is clear (vs. unclear) that familiarity is due to previous exposure.

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Main Authors: Garcia-Marques,Teresa, Silva,Rita R., Mello,Joana
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: ISPA-Instituto Universitário 2017
Online Access:http://scielo.pt/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0870-82312017000100006
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spelling oai:scielo:S0870-823120170001000062017-03-08Asking simultaneously about truth and familiarity may disrupt truth effectsGarcia-Marques,TeresaSilva,Rita R.Mello,Joana Illusions of truth Repetition Memory Misattribution Tell me something that sounds familiar and I will believe it to be true. This is a statement that we should believe because it summarizes a well-documented and empirically supported effect: the illusion of truth effect (see Dechêne, Stahl, Hansen, & Wänke, 2010 for a review). The fact is we are more likely to believe in a statement if we have been previously exposed to it (e.g., Bacon, 1979; Hasher, Goldstein, & Toppino, 1977). Repetition increases truth-value, generating the illusion that repeated statements are more valid than information we never heard or read before. A general assumption of the explanations of the truth effect is that the subjective experience of processing a familiar statement is interpreted as informing about the validity of the statement (see Dechêne et al., 2010). This implies that a process of misattribution underlies repetition’s effect on judgments of truth (e.g., Bornstein & D’Agostino, 1994; Mandler, Nakamura, & Van Zandt, 1987; Schwarz & Clore, 1983). In this paper we present an experiment that tests such misattribution process by making more or less explicit the real source of the feeling of familiarity with the statements. In this way we test whether illusions of truth decrease when it is clear (vs. unclear) that familiarity is due to previous exposure.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessISPA-Instituto UniversitárioAnálise Psicológica v.35 n.1 20172017-03-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://scielo.pt/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0870-82312017000100006en10.14417/ap.1121
institution SCIELO
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country Portugal
countrycode PT
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-scielo-pt
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region Europa del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Garcia-Marques,Teresa
Silva,Rita R.
Mello,Joana
spellingShingle Garcia-Marques,Teresa
Silva,Rita R.
Mello,Joana
Asking simultaneously about truth and familiarity may disrupt truth effects
author_facet Garcia-Marques,Teresa
Silva,Rita R.
Mello,Joana
author_sort Garcia-Marques,Teresa
title Asking simultaneously about truth and familiarity may disrupt truth effects
title_short Asking simultaneously about truth and familiarity may disrupt truth effects
title_full Asking simultaneously about truth and familiarity may disrupt truth effects
title_fullStr Asking simultaneously about truth and familiarity may disrupt truth effects
title_full_unstemmed Asking simultaneously about truth and familiarity may disrupt truth effects
title_sort asking simultaneously about truth and familiarity may disrupt truth effects
description Tell me something that sounds familiar and I will believe it to be true. This is a statement that we should believe because it summarizes a well-documented and empirically supported effect: the illusion of truth effect (see Dechêne, Stahl, Hansen, & Wänke, 2010 for a review). The fact is we are more likely to believe in a statement if we have been previously exposed to it (e.g., Bacon, 1979; Hasher, Goldstein, & Toppino, 1977). Repetition increases truth-value, generating the illusion that repeated statements are more valid than information we never heard or read before. A general assumption of the explanations of the truth effect is that the subjective experience of processing a familiar statement is interpreted as informing about the validity of the statement (see Dechêne et al., 2010). This implies that a process of misattribution underlies repetition’s effect on judgments of truth (e.g., Bornstein & D’Agostino, 1994; Mandler, Nakamura, & Van Zandt, 1987; Schwarz & Clore, 1983). In this paper we present an experiment that tests such misattribution process by making more or less explicit the real source of the feeling of familiarity with the statements. In this way we test whether illusions of truth decrease when it is clear (vs. unclear) that familiarity is due to previous exposure.
publisher ISPA-Instituto Universitário
publishDate 2017
url http://scielo.pt/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0870-82312017000100006
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