Humans hold unrealistically optimistic predictions of what their future holds. These predictions are generated and maintained as people update their beliefs more readily when receiving information that calls for adjustment in an optimistic direction relative to information that calls for adjustment in a pessimistic direction. Thus far this update bias has been shown when people make estimations regarding the self. Here, we examine whether asymmetric belief updating also exists when making estimations regarding population base rates. We reveal that while participants update beliefs regarding risk in the population in an asymmetric manner, such valence-dependent updating of base rates can be accounted for by priors. In contrast, we show that ...
This article studies the presence, resilience, and direction of the self-positivity bias under vari-...
Received academic wisdom holds that human judgment is characterized by unrealistic optimism, the ten...
A standard way to elicit expectations asks for the percentage chance an event will occur. Previous r...
Humans hold unrealistically optimistic predictions of what their future holds. These predictions are...
A diverse body of research has demonstrated that people update their beliefs to a greater extent whe...
AbstractA diverse body of research has demonstrated that people update their beliefs to a greater ex...
People learn more from new information when it leads to favorable future outlooks and thus can maint...
People learn more from new information when it leads to favorable future outlooks and thus can maint...
How people update their beliefs when faced with new information is integral to everyday life. A size...
A diverse body of research has demonstrated that people update their beliefs to a greater extent whe...
Funding agency: Russell Sage FoundationBayesian updating remains the benchmark for dynamic modeling ...
Personal predictions are often optimistically biased. This simple observation has troubling implicat...
A robust finding in social psychology is that people judge negative events as less likely to happen ...
People tend to update beliefs about their future outcomes in a valence-dependent way: they are likel...
A number of findings suggest that people’s expectations about the future are unrealistically optimis...
This article studies the presence, resilience, and direction of the self-positivity bias under vari-...
Received academic wisdom holds that human judgment is characterized by unrealistic optimism, the ten...
A standard way to elicit expectations asks for the percentage chance an event will occur. Previous r...
Humans hold unrealistically optimistic predictions of what their future holds. These predictions are...
A diverse body of research has demonstrated that people update their beliefs to a greater extent whe...
AbstractA diverse body of research has demonstrated that people update their beliefs to a greater ex...
People learn more from new information when it leads to favorable future outlooks and thus can maint...
People learn more from new information when it leads to favorable future outlooks and thus can maint...
How people update their beliefs when faced with new information is integral to everyday life. A size...
A diverse body of research has demonstrated that people update their beliefs to a greater extent whe...
Funding agency: Russell Sage FoundationBayesian updating remains the benchmark for dynamic modeling ...
Personal predictions are often optimistically biased. This simple observation has troubling implicat...
A robust finding in social psychology is that people judge negative events as less likely to happen ...
People tend to update beliefs about their future outcomes in a valence-dependent way: they are likel...
A number of findings suggest that people’s expectations about the future are unrealistically optimis...
This article studies the presence, resilience, and direction of the self-positivity bias under vari-...
Received academic wisdom holds that human judgment is characterized by unrealistic optimism, the ten...
A standard way to elicit expectations asks for the percentage chance an event will occur. Previous r...