Human reasoning is often biased by intuitive beliefs. A key question is whether the bias results from a failure to detect that the intuitions conflict with logical considerations or from a failure to discard these tempting intuitions. The present study addressed this unresolved debate by focusing on conflict-related autonomic nervous system modulation during biased reasoning. Participants' skin conductance responses (SCRs) were monitored while they solved classic syllogisms in which a cued intuitive response could be inconsistent or consistent with the logical correct response. Results indicated that all reasoners showed increased SCRs when solving the inconsistent conflict problems. Experiment 2 validated that this autonomic arousal boost ...
Belief-bias is the tendency to accept conclusions that are compatible with existing beliefs more fre...
<p>Reasoning is a fundamental human ability, vulnerable to error. According to behavioural measures,...
& Research on political judgment and decision-making has converged with decades of research in c...
Although human reasoning is often biased by intuitive heuristics, recent studies on conflict detecti...
Human reasoning is often biased by intuitive heuristics. A central question is whether the bias resu...
We investigated individual- and task-related differences in autonomic physiological responses induce...
International audienceThe sufficiency of behavioral data supporting reasoning biases was challenged....
ABSTRACT—Human reasoning is often biased by stereo-typical intuitions. The nature of such bias is no...
Recent evidence suggests that people are highly efficient at detecting conflicting outputs produced ...
Although it is well established that our thinking can often be biased, the precise cognitive mechani...
Although human reasoning is often biased by intuitive heuristics, recent studies on conflict detecti...
A controversial claim in recent dual process accounts of reasoning is that intuitive processes not o...
Recent findings on error or conflict detection during thinking suggest that individuals often intuit...
Popular dual process models have characterized reasoning as an interplay between fast, intuitive (Sy...
Reasoning and decision making are error prone. This is often attributed to a fast, phylogenetically ...
Belief-bias is the tendency to accept conclusions that are compatible with existing beliefs more fre...
<p>Reasoning is a fundamental human ability, vulnerable to error. According to behavioural measures,...
& Research on political judgment and decision-making has converged with decades of research in c...
Although human reasoning is often biased by intuitive heuristics, recent studies on conflict detecti...
Human reasoning is often biased by intuitive heuristics. A central question is whether the bias resu...
We investigated individual- and task-related differences in autonomic physiological responses induce...
International audienceThe sufficiency of behavioral data supporting reasoning biases was challenged....
ABSTRACT—Human reasoning is often biased by stereo-typical intuitions. The nature of such bias is no...
Recent evidence suggests that people are highly efficient at detecting conflicting outputs produced ...
Although it is well established that our thinking can often be biased, the precise cognitive mechani...
Although human reasoning is often biased by intuitive heuristics, recent studies on conflict detecti...
A controversial claim in recent dual process accounts of reasoning is that intuitive processes not o...
Recent findings on error or conflict detection during thinking suggest that individuals often intuit...
Popular dual process models have characterized reasoning as an interplay between fast, intuitive (Sy...
Reasoning and decision making are error prone. This is often attributed to a fast, phylogenetically ...
Belief-bias is the tendency to accept conclusions that are compatible with existing beliefs more fre...
<p>Reasoning is a fundamental human ability, vulnerable to error. According to behavioural measures,...
& Research on political judgment and decision-making has converged with decades of research in c...