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Why and When Beliefs Change.

Tali SharotMax RollwageCass R SunsteinStephen M Fleming
Published in: Perspectives on psychological science : a journal of the Association for Psychological Science (2022)
Why people do or do not change their beliefs has been a long-standing puzzle. Sometimes people hold onto false beliefs despite ample contradictory evidence; sometimes they change their beliefs without sufficient reason. Here, we propose that the utility of a belief is derived from the potential outcomes associated with holding it. Outcomes can be internal (e.g., positive/negative feelings) or external (e.g., material gain/loss), and only some are dependent on belief accuracy. Belief change can then be understood as an economic transaction in which the multidimensional utility of the old belief is compared against that of the new belief. Change will occur when potential outcomes alter across attributes, for example because of changing environments or when certain outcomes are made more or less salient.
Keyphrases
  • metabolic syndrome
  • risk assessment
  • skeletal muscle
  • insulin resistance