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How Your Brain Keeps You Believing Things That Aren't True - Education - Nairaland

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How Your Brain Keeps You Believing Things That Aren't True by Nobody: 6:56pm On Sep 03, 2016
Much of what you believe to be true probably isn't, thanks to a mental shortcut your brain takes without you realizing it.


In response to a question about whether the Bush administration had adequate evidence showing Iraq was providing weapons of mass destruction to terrorist groups, former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld famously said:

There are known knowns. There are things we know that we know. There are known unknowns. That is to say, there are things that we now know we don't know. But there are also unknown unknowns. There are things we do not know we don't know.


Something similar can be said about our beliefs. There are "true truths"—things we believe are true and genuinely are: The world is (roughly) round, not flat. Losing weight requires that we exercise more and eat fewer calories. Smoking cigarettes is bad for your health. There are also true lies—things that we believe to be false and actually are. The existence of Santa Claus, the Easter Bunny, and perpetual motion machines fall into this category. So far, so good.

But many other times, we’re tricked by false truths—things we think are true but aren’t. Drinking eight glasses of water a day seems like a good idea, but it doesn’t do a bit of good for your health. Many people believe that Napoleon was short, but there’s good reason to believe he was actually a bit taller than the average Frenchman of his day. Reducing salt intake has never been shown to prevent heart attacks or strokes, and there’s no such thing as an allergy to MSG.

How do these false truths come to be so widely believed? The answer lies in a powerful shortcut that our brains use every day: Information that's easier to process is viewed positively in almost every way. Cognitive scientists refer to this ease as "processing fluency," and it's why your knowledge base is probably more full of flawed ideas than you'd like to believe.



[size=14pt]THE MENTAL SHORTCUT YOU'RE CONSTANTLY MAKING[/size]
The effect of processing fluency on how we see the world is very robust—possibly alarmingly so. The greater something’s "fluency," the more we tend to like it, the less risky we judge it, the more popular and prevalent we believe it is, and the easier we think it is to do. Meals whose recipes are written in hard-to-read fonts are judged as more difficult to make. Money with which we’re unfamiliar is perceived to be less valuable. Stock prices of companies with easy-to-pronounce names do better on the day the company goes public than others.

Nor does this come down to just different types of information—it also matters how the same piece of information is presented or stated. We’re more likely to believe statements that are themselves easy to process. And one of the easiest ways to increase the fluency of a statement is to repeat it. Randomized controlled trials have shown that people are more likely to believe things to which they’ve been exposed repeatedly. What's more, the simple act of recalling a "fact" increases its fluency and therefore makes it more believable.

In other words, what counts as common knowledge is a mix of things that are true and other things that are false, all of which are believed because they’re widely held, frequently repeated, and routinely recalled. It’s this fluency-as-a-surrogate-for-truth shortcut that makes innovation tricky: We trust in assumptions about the way the world operates that seem so obviously true that we fail to test them. And in failing to check these basic assumptions, we slam the door shut on finding new and better ways to do things.

For example, when I worked at a large health care company, we observed that the vast majority of patients preferred to get their regular medications from local pharmacies rather than through the mail. Common sense told us that patients were voting with their prescriptions, choosing retail pharmacies over mail order, and that despite being able to save money by switching, those savings weren’t a big enough enticement to get them to change.

As in many other cases, though, common sense was wrong. It turned out that between 35% and 50% of those patients preferred mail order to retail. They simply hadn’t gotten around to making the change. What we thought was an intentional choice was just behavioral inertia.


[size=14pt]TESTING THE IDEAS WE DON'T KNOW ARE BAD[/size]
So how can you bypass your brain’s natural processing-fluency shortcut to make sure you aren't not clinging to so many false assumptions?

The best way is to build explicit experimentation into how you operate. For example, suppose you have a formal process for ranking candidates that you’re considering hiring. You might periodically, and at random, hire the candidate ranked second or third. This approach allows you to test whether your ranking algorithm is actually working; without it, you’ll never really know.

In the meantime, though, we shouldn't be all that surprised that our brains assume that things that are easier to process are just all around better. After all, in the harsh and dangerous environment in which our brains evolved, things that were familiar—the people in our group, the path to the river, the sun and moon moving across the sky—were likely to be safer and more trustworthy.

But our environment has changed enormously since then. Now more than ever, we need something far more reliable to separate truth from fiction. And for that, there's always the scientific method.





http://www.fastcompany.com/3063319/work-smart/how-your-brain-keeps-you-believing-crap-that-isnt-true

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Re: How Your Brain Keeps You Believing Things That Aren't True by ifex370(m): 7:00pm On Sep 03, 2016
Epic
Re: How Your Brain Keeps You Believing Things That Aren't True by IamOpemipo(m): 8:55am On Nov 13, 2016
I lik d article..buh I stl dnt get it, u mean wateva we mak our brain believe, ova time it sticks to dat idea or wat?

Yieldings
Re: How Your Brain Keeps You Believing Things That Aren't True by Nobody: 6:32pm On Nov 13, 2016
IamOpemipo:
I lik d article..buh I stl dnt get it, u mean wateva we mak our brain believe, ova time it sticks to dat idea or wat?

Yieldings

Hi, thanks for the question.

We prefer things ( in this case, "beliefs" ) that are easy to think about rather than beliefs that are difficult to think about. The ease or difficulty of these beliefs will differ for each person. These false truths that the article talks about ( "things we think are true but aren't ) that many of us believe have more to do with the subjective experience we associate them with. In other words, if they make us feel good, then our brain is more likely to go back to them and use them as mental shortcuts to make sense of the world around us. We become accustomed to these false truths and often aren't aware that they are false.

Your question also relates to the idea of practice but with practice ( such as practicing a new skill ), you've to know when to correct your mistakes, so you can improve. Learning something isn't just about the quantity of your practice but quality is important as well. If you're practicing mistakes along the way and not correcting them, you're not going to get better at that thing, so the key is to practice frequently + correctly, and over time you would get better and better. As you get better, you would start feeling more confident, which would only make you want to practice even more. The brain is incredibly plastic and the more you practice, the better you will get at it. While certain things such as language acquisition, are better when we're young, adults too, have the capacity to rewire their brains and learn. There's a special type of brain tissue called myelin that helps with this - in terms that the more you practice that skill, the more of it is produced; it's an important factor in what makes us learn and master skills as adults.

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