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Confidence drives a neural confirmation bias

Psychology

Confidence drives a neural confirmation bias

M. Rollwage, A. Loosen, et al.

Explore how confirmation bias can entrench beliefs, particularly when confidence runs high. In this study by Max Rollwage, Alisa Loosen, Tobias U. Hauser, Rani Moran, Raymond J. Dolan, and Stephen M. Fleming, the interplay between confidence and neural processing reveals that high confidence amplifies the brain's integration of confirmatory evidence while suppressing disconfirmatory cues. Could metacognitive interventions be the key to overcoming these biases?... show more
Abstract
A prominent source of polarised and entrenched beliefs is confirmation bias, where evidence against one's position is selectively disregarded. This effect is most starkly evident when opposing parties are highly confident in their decisions. Here we combine human magnetoencephalography (MEG) with behavioural and neural modelling to identify alterations in post-decisional processing that contribute to the phenomenon of confirmation bias. We show that holding high confidence in a decision leads to a striking modulation of post-decision neural processing, such that integration of confirmatory evidence is amplified while disconfirmatory evidence processing is abolished. We conclude that confidence shapes a selective neural gating for choice-consistent information, reducing the likelihood of changes of mind on the basis of new information. A central role for confidence in shaping the fidelity of evidence accumulation indicates that metacognitive interventions may help ameliorate this pervasive cognitive bias.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
May 26, 2020
Authors
Max Rollwage, Alisa Loosen, Tobias U. Hauser, Rani Moran, Raymond J. Dolan, Stephen M. Fleming
Tags
confirmation bias
confidence
neural processing
belief revision
metacognitive interventions
evidence accumulation
magnetoencephalography
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