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

Related Articles

Wording effects in moral judgments

As the study of moral judgments grows, it becomes imperative to compare results across studies in order to create unified theories within the field. These efforts are potentially undermined, however, by variations in wor...

Preference for increasing wages: How do people value various streams of income?

Prior studies have found that subjects prefer an improving sequence of income over a constant sequence, even if the constant sequence offers a larger present-discounted value. However, little is known about how these pre...

Attribute salience in graphical representations affects evaluation

By manipulating the scale in graphs, this study demonstrated a new evaluation bias caused by attribute salience in graphical representations. That is, (de)compressing the graph axis scale changed the relative distance wi...

How many calories were in those hamburgers again? Distribution density biases recall of attribute values

Decisions that consumers make often rest on evaluations of attributes, such as how large, expensive, good, or fattening an option seems. Extant research has demonstrated that these evaluations in turn depend upon the rec...

Right-wing ideology and numeracy: A perception of greater ability, but poorer performance

Right-wing ideology and cognitive ability, including objective numeracy, have been found to relate negatively. Although objective and subjective numeracy correlate positively, it is unclear whether subjective numeracy re...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP678435
  • DOI -
  • Views 152
  • Downloads 0

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