Individual differences in information order effects: The importance of right-hemisphere access in belief updating

The order in which information is received alters the evaluation of causal hypotheses. Specifically, research suggests that the last piece of information oftentimes has the greatest impact on the evaluation and that the difference in subjective value between two pieces of information is an important...

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Veröffentlicht in:Acta psychologica 2014-05, Vol.148, p.115-122
Hauptverfasser: Jasper, John D., Kunzler, J. Scott, Prichard, Eric C., Christman, Stephen D.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The order in which information is received alters the evaluation of causal hypotheses. Specifically, research suggests that the last piece of information oftentimes has the greatest impact on the evaluation and that the difference in subjective value between two pieces of information is an important factor influencing the magnitude of this recency effect. The present paper extends this line of work by exploring individual differences in this phenomenon via one's degree of handedness. Two hundred and five participants were given two hypothetical scenarios and related causal hypotheses accompanied by two pieces of additional information and asked to revise their belief in each hypothesis as information accumulated. Results confirmed predictions that 1) inconsistent/mixed-handers (those who use their non-dominant hand for at least some activities) show a larger effect with two pieces of inconsistent weak or strong information, and 2) neither mixed-handers nor consistent/strong-handers (those who use their dominant hand for almost all activities) show an effect with strong and weak pieces of consistent information. Mixed-handers' susceptibility to persuasive arguments and Ramachandran’s (1995; Ramachandran and Blakeslee, 1998) belief-updating theory centered around communication between the two halves of the brain and functional access to the right hemisphere are used to account for these data. •Information order affects beliefs, with most people showing recency effects.•Our goal was to explore individual differences as a function of handedness strength.•MH show more belief updating than SH except when information is overly strong.•We argue that this is because of greater RH access for MH.•This seems to support Ramachandran's (1995) belief updating theory.
ISSN:0001-6918
1873-6297
DOI:10.1016/j.actpsy.2014.01.004