I find that monetary incentives don't reduce illusory truth, even when people can rely on prior knowledge to secure a reward (117)
and 12 - 1:30 PM:
@phuchuynhle.bsky.social shows that chronic, but not acute, ostracism predicts belief in misinformation (052)
I find that monetary incentives don't reduce illusory truth, even when people can rely on prior knowledge to secure a reward (117)
and 12 - 1:30 PM:
@phuchuynhle.bsky.social shows that chronic, but not acute, ostracism predicts belief in misinformation (052)
today 12 - 1:30 PM:
Jae counters the assumption that demand for political fact-checks is low (167)
@katie-allen.bsky.social finds that while repetition inflates many judgments, it doesn’t always create an illusion of creativity (168)
today 12 - 1:30 PM:
Jae counters the assumption that demand for political fact-checks is low (167)
@katie-allen.bsky.social finds that while repetition inflates many judgments, it doesn’t always create an illusion of creativity (168)
I find that monetary incentives don't reduce illusory truth, even when people can rely on prior knowledge to secure a reward (117)
and 12 - 1:30 PM:
@phuchuynhle.bsky.social shows that chronic, but not acute, ostracism predicts belief in misinformation (052)