Overcoming intuition: Metacognitive difficulty activates analytic reasoning.
Princeton University · University of Chicago · +1 more institution
Abstract
Humans appear to reason using two processing styles: System 1 processes that are quick, intuitive, and effortless and System 2 processes that are slow, analytical, and deliberate that occasionally correct the output of System 1. Four experiments suggest that System 2 processes are activated by metacognitive experiences of difficulty or disfluency during the process of reasoning. Incidental experiences of difficulty or disfluency--receiving information in a degraded font (Experiments 1 and 4), in difficult-to-read lettering (Experiment 2), or while furrowing one's brow (Experiment 3)--reduced the impact of heuristics and defaults in judgment (Experiments 1 and 3), reduced reliance on peripheral cues in…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 13.18
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 46
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Psychology
- Cognitive psychology
- Heuristics
- Metacognition
- Persuasion
- Intuition
- Cognition
- Cognitive science
- Quality Education