Recognizing biased reasoning: Conflict detection during decision-making and decision-evaluation

Although it is well established that our thinking can often be biased, the precise cognitive mechanisms underlying these biases are still debated. The present study builds on recent research showing that biased reasoners often seem aware that their reasoning is incorrect; they show signs of conflict...

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Main Authors: Eva M. Janssen, Samuël B. Velinga, Wim de Neys, Tamara van Gog
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-06-01
Series:Acta Psychologica
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S000169182100072X
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spelling doaj-587eada41a454d0aba697eb6ae7ad1772021-05-30T04:39:59ZengElsevierActa Psychologica0001-69182021-06-01217103322Recognizing biased reasoning: Conflict detection during decision-making and decision-evaluationEva M. Janssen0Samuël B. Velinga1Wim de Neys2Tamara van Gog3Department of Education, Utrecht University, the Netherlands; Corresponding author at: Department of Education, Utrecht University, Heidelberglaan 1, 3584 CS Utrecht, the Netherlands.Department of Education, Utrecht University, the NetherlandsUniversité de Paris, UMR CNRS 8240 LaPsyDÉ, FranceDepartment of Education, Utrecht University, the NetherlandsAlthough it is well established that our thinking can often be biased, the precise cognitive mechanisms underlying these biases are still debated. The present study builds on recent research showing that biased reasoners often seem aware that their reasoning is incorrect; they show signs of conflict detection. One important shortcoming in this research is that the conflict detection effect has only been studied with classic problem-solving tasks, requiring people to make a decision themselves. However, in many reasoning situations people are confronted with decisions already made by others. Therefore, the present study (N = 159) investigated whether conflict detection occurs not only during reasoning on problem-solving tasks (i.e., decision-making), but also on vignette tasks, requiring participants to evaluate decisions made by others. We analyzed participants' conflict detection sensitivity on confidence and response time measures. Results showed that conflict detection occurred during both decision-making and decision-evaluation, as indicated by a decreased confidence. The response time index appeared to be a less reliable measure of conflict detection on the novel tasks. These findings are very relevant for studying reasoning in contexts in which recognizing reasoning errors is important; for instance, in education where teachers have to give feedback on students' reasoning.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S000169182100072XReasoning and decision-makingDecision-evaluationHeuristics and biasesConflict detection
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eva M. Janssen
Samuël B. Velinga
Wim de Neys
Tamara van Gog
spellingShingle Eva M. Janssen
Samuël B. Velinga
Wim de Neys
Tamara van Gog
Recognizing biased reasoning: Conflict detection during decision-making and decision-evaluation
Acta Psychologica
Reasoning and decision-making
Decision-evaluation
Heuristics and biases
Conflict detection
author_facet Eva M. Janssen
Samuël B. Velinga
Wim de Neys
Tamara van Gog
author_sort Eva M. Janssen
title Recognizing biased reasoning: Conflict detection during decision-making and decision-evaluation
title_short Recognizing biased reasoning: Conflict detection during decision-making and decision-evaluation
title_full Recognizing biased reasoning: Conflict detection during decision-making and decision-evaluation
title_fullStr Recognizing biased reasoning: Conflict detection during decision-making and decision-evaluation
title_full_unstemmed Recognizing biased reasoning: Conflict detection during decision-making and decision-evaluation
title_sort recognizing biased reasoning: conflict detection during decision-making and decision-evaluation
publisher Elsevier
series Acta Psychologica
issn 0001-6918
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Although it is well established that our thinking can often be biased, the precise cognitive mechanisms underlying these biases are still debated. The present study builds on recent research showing that biased reasoners often seem aware that their reasoning is incorrect; they show signs of conflict detection. One important shortcoming in this research is that the conflict detection effect has only been studied with classic problem-solving tasks, requiring people to make a decision themselves. However, in many reasoning situations people are confronted with decisions already made by others. Therefore, the present study (N = 159) investigated whether conflict detection occurs not only during reasoning on problem-solving tasks (i.e., decision-making), but also on vignette tasks, requiring participants to evaluate decisions made by others. We analyzed participants' conflict detection sensitivity on confidence and response time measures. Results showed that conflict detection occurred during both decision-making and decision-evaluation, as indicated by a decreased confidence. The response time index appeared to be a less reliable measure of conflict detection on the novel tasks. These findings are very relevant for studying reasoning in contexts in which recognizing reasoning errors is important; for instance, in education where teachers have to give feedback on students' reasoning.
topic Reasoning and decision-making
Decision-evaluation
Heuristics and biases
Conflict detection
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S000169182100072X
work_keys_str_mv AT evamjanssen recognizingbiasedreasoningconflictdetectionduringdecisionmakinganddecisionevaluation
AT samuelbvelinga recognizingbiasedreasoningconflictdetectionduringdecisionmakinganddecisionevaluation
AT wimdeneys recognizingbiasedreasoningconflictdetectionduringdecisionmakinganddecisionevaluation
AT tamaravangog recognizingbiasedreasoningconflictdetectionduringdecisionmakinganddecisionevaluation
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