Illusory truth effect
The illusory truth effect (also known as the truth effect, the illusion-of-truth effect, the reiteration effect, the validity effect, and the frequency-validity relationship) is the tendency to believe information to be correct after repeated exposure to the claim in question. This is an illusion that appears due to unconscious cognition.
| Tell me about your mother Psychology |
| For our next session... |
|
| Popping into your mind |
v - t - e |
“”"Why are so many people convinced that we only use 10% of our brains, or that Eskimos have no words for snow...?" |
| — Chris (Anon)[1] |
This phenomenon has been studied extensively, with the term first appearing in psychology literature in a psychology paper[2] from the late 1970s. The illusion is now backed up by several psychology experiments.[3]
The illusion is thought to be partly caused by the concept of processing fluency,
See also
References
- "The Truth Effect and Other Processing Fluency Miracles". Science Blogs.
- Frequency and the Conference of Referential Validity. Toronto University
- The Truth About the Truth: A Meta-Analytic Review of the Truth Effect. SAGE Journals
You can help RationalWiki by expanding it.