Login / Signup

Non-strategic detection of identity-threatening information: Epistemic validation and identity defense may share a common cognitive basis.

Johanna AbendrothPeter NaurothTobias RichterMario Gollwitzer
Published in: PloS one (2022)
Readers use prior knowledge to evaluate the validity of statements and detect false information without effort and strategic control. The present study expands this research by exploring whether people also non-strategically detect information that threatens their social identity. Participants (N = 77) completed a task in which they had to respond to a "True" or "False" probe after reading true, false, identity-threatening, or non-threatening sentences. Replicating previous studies, participants reacted more slowly to a positive probe ("True") after reading false (vs. true) sentences. Notably, participants also reacted more slowly to a positive probe after reading identity-threatening (vs. non-threatening) sentences. These results provide first evidence that identity-threatening information, just as false information, is detected at a very early stage of information processing and lends support to the notion of a routine, non-strategic identity-defense mechanism.
Keyphrases
  • health information
  • early stage
  • working memory
  • healthcare
  • living cells
  • mental health
  • squamous cell carcinoma
  • clinical practice
  • lymph node
  • neoadjuvant chemotherapy
  • real time pcr
  • innate immune