Article 2020

Dogmatism manifests in lowered information search under uncertainty

{When knowledge is scarce, it is adaptive to seek further information to resolve uncertainty and obtain a more accurate worldview. Biases in such information-seeking behavior can contribute to the maintenance of inaccurate views. Here, we investigate whether predispositions for uncertainty-guided information seeking relate to individual differences in dogmatism, a phenomenon linked to entrenched beliefs in political, scientific, and religious discourse. We addressed this question in a perceptual decision-making task, allowing us to rule out motivational factors and isolate the role of uncertainty. In two independent general population samples (n \textequals 370 and n \textequals 364), we show that more dogmatic participants are less likely to seek out new information to refine an initial perceptual decision, leading to a reduction in overall belief accuracy despite similar initial decision performance. Trial-by-trial modeling revealed that dogmatic participants placed less reliance on internal signals of uncertainty (confidence) to guide information search, rendering them less likely to seek additional information to update beliefs derived from weak or uncertain initial evidence. Together, our results highlight a cognitive mechanism that may contribute to the formation of dogmatic worldviews.}

Author(s): Schulz, L and Rollwage, M and Dolan, RJ and Fleming, SM
Journal: {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America}
Volume: 117
Number (issue): 49
Pages: 31527--31534
Year: 2020
Publisher: National Academy of Sciences
Bibtex Type: Article (article)
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2009641117
Address: Washington, D.C.
Electronic Archiving: grant_archive

BibTex

@article{item_3265151,
  title = {{Dogmatism manifests in lowered information search under uncertainty}},
  journal = {{Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America}},
  abstract = {{When knowledge is scarce, it is adaptive to seek further information to resolve uncertainty and obtain a more accurate worldview. Biases in such information-seeking behavior can contribute to the maintenance of inaccurate views. Here, we investigate whether predispositions for uncertainty-guided information seeking relate to individual differences in dogmatism, a phenomenon linked to entrenched beliefs in political, scientific, and religious discourse. We addressed this question in a perceptual decision-making task, allowing us to rule out motivational factors and isolate the role of uncertainty. In two independent general population samples (n \textequals 370 and n \textequals 364), we show that more dogmatic participants are less likely to seek out new information to refine an initial perceptual decision, leading to a reduction in overall belief accuracy despite similar initial decision performance. Trial-by-trial modeling revealed that dogmatic participants placed less reliance on internal signals of uncertainty (confidence) to guide information search, rendering them less likely to seek additional information to update beliefs derived from weak or uncertain initial evidence. Together, our results highlight a cognitive mechanism that may contribute to the formation of dogmatic worldviews.}},
  volume = {117},
  number = {49},
  pages = {31527--31534},
  publisher = {National Academy of Sciences},
  address = {Washington, D.C.},
  year = {2020},
  slug = {item_3265151},
  author = {Schulz, L and Rollwage, M and Dolan, RJ and Fleming, SM}
}