A hard to read font reduces the causality bias

Journal Title: Judgment and Decision Making - Year 2019, Vol 14, Issue 5

Abstract

Previous studies have demonstrated that fluency affects judgment and decision-making. The purpose of the present research was to investigate the effect of perceptual fluency in a causal learning task that usually induces an illusion of causality in non-contingent conditions. We predicted that a reduction of fluency could improve accuracy in the detection of non-contingency and, therefore, could be used to debias illusory perceptions of causality. Participants were randomly assigned to either an easy-to-read or a hard-to-read condition. Our results showed a strong bias (i.e., overestimation) of causality in those participants who performed the non-contingent task in the easy-to-read font, which replicated the standard causality bias effect. This effect was reduced when the same task was presented in a hard-to-read font. Overall, our results provide evidence for a reduction of the causality bias when presenting the problem in a hard-to-read font. This suggests that perceptual fluency affects causal judgments.

Authors and Affiliations

Marcos Díaz-Lago and Helena Matute

Keywords

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  • EP ID EP678435
  • DOI -
  • Views 165
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How To Cite

Marcos Díaz-Lago and Helena Matute (2019). A hard to read font reduces the causality bias. Judgment and Decision Making, 14(5), -. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-678435