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Researchers Identify a New Cognitive Bias

“My theory is true, if I do say so myself.” SPOT stands for “Spontaneous Preference For Own Theories,” and it’s a newly identified cognitive bias.
(BASTIAN)

We write often on Big Think about cognitive biases, and researchers in England have just discovered a new one we didn’t know about. You may be thinking, “just what we needed (sigh),” but anything that helps us see through the ways we fool ourselves is worth knowing about. It’s called the “Spontaneous Preference For Own Theories,” or “SPOT,” effect.

You may be familiar with these classic cognitive biases:

Illusory superiority bias — This widely held bias is the assumption one is better than average. Doesn’t matter what characteristic it is, you’re better. Obviously, only 50% of all actually are better than average, but no matter.

Confirmation bias — This is a description of our tendency to wind up believing what we want to believe. We may cherry-pick evidence, or we may stop gathering it altogether once we’ve got “proof” that the conclusion we desire has been confirmed.

Endowment effect — We acquire things we like, yes, but we also like the things we’ve acquired. We believe a thing that’s ours has greater value than it really does just because we own it.

And now Aiden Gregg and colleagues at the University of Southampton have announced the SPOT effect, which is sort of a combination of all three. It posits that we’re more likely to believe a theory because it’s ours, and will even attempt to hold onto our faith in it in spite of mounting evidence.

The researchers conducted three separate studies. In each, they told subjects about fictional distant planet Wugworld on which live two species, one of which is predator, and the other of which is prey. In one study, they were called Niffites and Luupites. The idea was to create a scenario in which the subject would have no prior investment. (In one test, the species were Dassites and Fommites.)

Each subject was asked to imagine one of two things:

  • That the subject had a theory that the Niffites were the predators with the Luupites being their prey.
  • That some person with the deliberately androgynous name “Alex” believed the same thing. (In one test, there was no Alex and it was just a theory unattributed to anyone.)
  • The subjects were presented a series of seven facts about Wugworld, starting with some that supported the theory that Niffites were the predators — “Niffites are at least twice as large as Luupites.” — but changing over time to evidence that it was the Luupites who were actually the aggressors: “Luupites have been observed eating the dead bodies of Niffites.” After each new fact, the subjects were asked again if they still thought the theory was true.

    The three studies mixed things up a bit, presenting the experiment to subjects together in a room, and separately online. In one test, the species were Dassites and Fommites, and in one there was no Alex. Regardless of setting, age, or gender, across all of the tests, subjects who imagined the theory to be their own stubbornly held onto it longer than those assessing of the same theory belonging to Alex or somebody else.

    According to Gregg and his team, the SPOT effect isn’t super-strong, suggesting it to be more of an influence than expository. Still, one has to wonder how strong the effect would be when the theory in question is something someone actually cares about, and not one about made-up creatures far away on planet Wugworld.


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