Repeated exposure to misinformation reduces moral condemnation of those falsehoods, as shown by Effron & Raj (2020) 1 —and moral condemnation may play an important role in stopping the spread of ...
If you consider yourself a climate science supporter, you probably wouldn’t think simple exposure to a skeptic’s claim could shift your views. Our new research has produced worrying findings. Climate ...
Repetition effects in memory processing describe the changes in behavioural performance and underlying neural responses that occur when a stimulus is encountered multiple times. Behaviourally, ...
A study recently published in Psychological Science reveals that when people repeatedly encounter headlines about corporate wrongdoing, they view the wrongdoing as less unethical and are more likely ...
Watching sensationalized, people-pandering content can slowly erode your ability to tell right from wrong. Imagine scrolling through your social media feed, only to come across a news headline that ...
If you consider yourself a climate science supporter, you probably wouldn’t think simple exposure to a sceptic’s claim could shift your views. Our new research has produced worrying findings. Climate ...
Citations: Nordhielm, Christie. 2002. The Influence of Level of Processing on Advertising Repetition Effects. Journal of Consumer Research. (3)371-382.