Two experiments contrast the effects of fluency due to repetition and fluency due to color contrast on judgments of truth, after participants learn to associate high levels of fluency with falseness (i.e., a reversal of the fluency-truth link). Experiment 1 shows that the interpretation of fluency as a sign of truth is harder to reverse when learning is promoted with repetition rather than with perceptual fluency. Experiment 2 shows that when color contrast and repetition are manipulated orthogonally, the reversal of the truth effect learned with color contrast does not generalize to repetition. These results suggest specificities in the processing experiences generated by different sources of fluency, and that their influences can be separ...
People judge repeated statements as more truthful than new statements: a truth effect. In three pre-...
Studies have demonstrated that perceptual fluency—the ease of perceiving stimuli—does not contribute...
Processing fluency, the experienced ease of ongoing mental operations, influences judgments such as ...
Two experiments contrast the effects of fluency due to repetition and fluency due to color contrast...
We contrast the effects of conceptual and perceptual fluency resulting from repetition in the truth ...
Repeated statements are more frequently judged to be true. One position relates this so‐called “trut...
Previous research has shown that fluency effects are driven by discrepancies between current and bas...
Past research indicates that people judge repeated statements as more true than new ones. An experie...
Typically, people are more likely to consider a previously seen or heard statement as true compared ...
Statements' rated truth increases when people encounter them repeatedly. Processing fluency is a cen...
Past research indicates that people judge repeated statements as more true than new ones. An experie...
Tese de Doutoramento apresentada ao ISPA - Instituto UniversitárioABSTRACT: Repetition seems to incr...
studies investigated positivity and fluency influences on the truth effect. Study 1 found cor-th!” 1...
The eminent role of processing fluency in judgment and decision-making is undisputed. Not only is fl...
People are more likely to judge repeated statements as true compared to new statements, a phenomenon...
People judge repeated statements as more truthful than new statements: a truth effect. In three pre-...
Studies have demonstrated that perceptual fluency—the ease of perceiving stimuli—does not contribute...
Processing fluency, the experienced ease of ongoing mental operations, influences judgments such as ...
Two experiments contrast the effects of fluency due to repetition and fluency due to color contrast...
We contrast the effects of conceptual and perceptual fluency resulting from repetition in the truth ...
Repeated statements are more frequently judged to be true. One position relates this so‐called “trut...
Previous research has shown that fluency effects are driven by discrepancies between current and bas...
Past research indicates that people judge repeated statements as more true than new ones. An experie...
Typically, people are more likely to consider a previously seen or heard statement as true compared ...
Statements' rated truth increases when people encounter them repeatedly. Processing fluency is a cen...
Past research indicates that people judge repeated statements as more true than new ones. An experie...
Tese de Doutoramento apresentada ao ISPA - Instituto UniversitárioABSTRACT: Repetition seems to incr...
studies investigated positivity and fluency influences on the truth effect. Study 1 found cor-th!” 1...
The eminent role of processing fluency in judgment and decision-making is undisputed. Not only is fl...
People are more likely to judge repeated statements as true compared to new statements, a phenomenon...
People judge repeated statements as more truthful than new statements: a truth effect. In three pre-...
Studies have demonstrated that perceptual fluency—the ease of perceiving stimuli—does not contribute...
Processing fluency, the experienced ease of ongoing mental operations, influences judgments such as ...