Literature DB >> 19638628

Uniting the tribes of fluency to form a metacognitive nation.

Adam L Alter1, Daniel M Oppenheimer.   

Abstract

Processing fluency, or the subjective experience of ease with which people process information, reliably influences people's judgments across a broad range of social dimensions. Experimenters have manipulated processing fluency using a vast array of techniques, which, despite their diversity, produce remarkably similar judgmental consequences. For example, people similarly judge stimuli that are semantically primed (conceptual fluency), visually clear (perceptual fluency), and phonologically simple (linguistic fluency) as more true than their less fluent counterparts. The authors offer the first comprehensive review of such mechanisms and their implications for judgment and decision making. Because every cognition falls along a continuum from effortless to demanding and generates a corresponding fluency experience, the authors argue that fluency is a ubiquitous metacognitive cue in reasoning and social judgment.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19638628     DOI: 10.1177/1088868309341564

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pers Soc Psychol Rev        ISSN: 1532-7957


  124 in total

1.  Smooth Trajectories Travel Farther into the Future: Perceptual Fluency Effects on Prediction of Trend Continuation.

Authors:  Julie Y Huang; Hyunjin Song; John A Bargh
Journal:  J Exp Soc Psychol       Date:  2011-03-01

2.  Perceptual fluency can be used as a cue for categorization decisions.

Authors:  Sarah J Miles; John Paul Minda
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2012-08

3.  The effects of time perspective and level of construal on social distance.

Authors:  Elena Stephan; Nira Liberman; Yaacov Trope
Journal:  J Exp Soc Psychol       Date:  2011-03-01

4.  The differential effects of fluency due to repetition and fluency due to color contrast on judgments of truth.

Authors:  Rita R Silva; Teresa Garcia-Marques; Joana Mello
Journal:  Psychol Res       Date:  2015-07-30

5.  Expressive Incoherence and Alexithymia in Autism Spectrum Disorder.

Authors:  Andreia P Costa; Georges Steffgen; Andrea C Samson
Journal:  J Autism Dev Disord       Date:  2017-06

6.  Investigations in spontaneous discounting.

Authors:  Daniel M Oppenheimer; Benoît Monin
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2009-07

7.  A broader view of perirhinal function: from recognition memory to fluency-based decisions.

Authors:  Ilana T Z Dew; Roberto Cabeza
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2013-09-04       Impact factor: 6.167

8.  Vertical metaphor with motion and judgment: a valenced congruency effect with fluency.

Authors:  Sébastien Freddi; Joël Cretenet; Vincent Dru
Journal:  Psychol Res       Date:  2014-09

Review 9.  Grappling With Implicit Social Bias: A Perspective From Memory Research.

Authors:  Heather D Lucas; Jessica D Creery; Xiaoqing Hu; Ken A Paller
Journal:  Neuroscience       Date:  2019-02-10       Impact factor: 3.590

10.  The in-out effect: examining the role of perceptual fluency in the preference for words with inward-wandering consonantal articulation.

Authors:  Sandra Godinho; Margarida V Garrido
Journal:  Psychol Res       Date:  2019-08-10
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