Literature DB >> 32592890

Bayesian or biased? Analytic thinking and political belief updating.

Ben M Tappin1, Gordon Pennycook2, David G Rand3.   

Abstract

A surprising finding from U.S. opinion surveys is that political disagreements tend to be greatest among the most cognitively sophisticated opposing partisans. Recent experiments suggest a hypothesis that could explain this pattern: cognitive sophistication magnifies politically biased processing of new information. However, the designs of these experiments tend to contain several limitations that complicate their support for this hypothesis. In particular, they tend to (i) focus on people's worldviews and political identities, at the expense of their other, more specific prior beliefs, (ii) lack direct comparison with a politically unbiased benchmark, and (iii) focus on people's judgments of new information, rather than on their posterior beliefs following exposure to the information. We report two studies designed to address these limitations. In our design, U.S. subjects received noisy but informative signals about the truth or falsity of partisan political questions, and we measured their prior and posterior beliefs, and cognitive sophistication, operationalized as analytic thinking inferred via performance on the Cognitive Reflection Test. We compared subjects' posterior beliefs to an unbiased Bayesian benchmark. We found little evidence that analytic thinking magnified politically biased deviations from the benchmark. In contrast, we found consistent evidence that greater analytic thinking was associated with posterior beliefs closer to the benchmark. Together, these results are inconsistent with the hypothesis that cognitive sophistication magnifies politically biased processing. We discuss differences between our design and prior work that can inform future tests of this hypothesis.
Copyright © 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Bayesian updating; Cognitive sophistication; Polarization; Political beliefs

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32592890     DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2020.104375

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cognition        ISSN: 0010-0277


  3 in total

1.  COVID-19 and Politically Motivated Reasoning.

Authors:  Allegra Maguire; Emil Persson; Daniel Västfjäll; Gustav Tinghög
Journal:  Med Decis Making       Date:  2022-08-20       Impact factor: 2.749

2.  The role of motivated science reception and numeracy in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Authors:  Fabian Hutmacher; Regina Reichardt; Markus Appel
Journal:  Public Underst Sci       Date:  2021-10-01

3.  Beliefs About COVID-19 in Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States: A Novel Test of Political Polarization and Motivated Reasoning.

Authors:  Gordon Pennycook; Jonathon McPhetres; Bence Bago; David G Rand
Journal:  Pers Soc Psychol Bull       Date:  2021-06-28
  3 in total

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