This article combines findings from cognitive psychology on the role of processing fluency in truth judgments with epistemological theory on justification of belief. We first review evidence that repeated exposure to a statement increases the subjective ease with which that statement is processed. This increased processing fluency, in turn, increases the probability that the statement is judged to be true. The basic question discussed here is whether the use of processing fluency as a cue to truth is epistemically justified. In the present analysis, based on Bayes’ Theorem, we adopt the reliable-process account of justification presented by Goldman (1986)and show that fluency is a reliable cue to truth, under the assumption that the majorit...
Abstract: This paper endeavors to establish a comprehensive account of human knowledge that embraces...
Past research indicates that people judge repeated statements as more true than new ones. An experie...
Repetition increases the likelihood that a statement will be judged as true. This illusory truth eff...
Repeated statements are more frequently judged to be true. One position relates this so‐called “trut...
Information is more likely believed to be true when it feels easy rather than difficult to process. ...
People are more inclined to believe that information is true if they have encountered it before. Lit...
Individuals judge fluently processed statements truer than disfluent statements, which reflects an i...
People are more likely to judge repeated statements as true compared to new statements, a phenomenon...
Tese de Doutoramento apresentada ao ISPA - Instituto UniversitárioABSTRACT: Repetition seems to incr...
Statements' rated truth increases when people encounter them repeatedly. Processing fluency is a cen...
The eminent role of processing fluency in judgment and decision-making is undisputed. Not only is fl...
Typically, people are more likely to consider a previously seen or heard statement as true compared ...
Tell me something that sounds familiar and I will believe it to be true. This is a statement that we...
studies investigated positivity and fluency influences on the truth effect. Study 1 found cor-th!” 1...
Language is one of the main means of acquiring information about the world. An important debate in s...
Abstract: This paper endeavors to establish a comprehensive account of human knowledge that embraces...
Past research indicates that people judge repeated statements as more true than new ones. An experie...
Repetition increases the likelihood that a statement will be judged as true. This illusory truth eff...
Repeated statements are more frequently judged to be true. One position relates this so‐called “trut...
Information is more likely believed to be true when it feels easy rather than difficult to process. ...
People are more inclined to believe that information is true if they have encountered it before. Lit...
Individuals judge fluently processed statements truer than disfluent statements, which reflects an i...
People are more likely to judge repeated statements as true compared to new statements, a phenomenon...
Tese de Doutoramento apresentada ao ISPA - Instituto UniversitárioABSTRACT: Repetition seems to incr...
Statements' rated truth increases when people encounter them repeatedly. Processing fluency is a cen...
The eminent role of processing fluency in judgment and decision-making is undisputed. Not only is fl...
Typically, people are more likely to consider a previously seen or heard statement as true compared ...
Tell me something that sounds familiar and I will believe it to be true. This is a statement that we...
studies investigated positivity and fluency influences on the truth effect. Study 1 found cor-th!” 1...
Language is one of the main means of acquiring information about the world. An important debate in s...
Abstract: This paper endeavors to establish a comprehensive account of human knowledge that embraces...
Past research indicates that people judge repeated statements as more true than new ones. An experie...
Repetition increases the likelihood that a statement will be judged as true. This illusory truth eff...