scholarly journals The psychophysiological correlates of cognitive dissonance

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-11
Author(s):  
Gavin W. Ploger ◽  
Johnanna Dunaway ◽  
Patrick Fournier ◽  
Stuart Soroka

Abstract This preregistered study uses a combination of physiological measures to explore both the activation and reduction components of cognitive dissonance theory. More precisely, we use skin conductance to identify dissonance arousal, a short-term affective response to counter-attitudinal stimuli, and then use heart rate variability to measure dissonance reduction, which reflects longer-term patterns of emotional regulation and information processing. Our preliminary tests find weak evidence of dissonance arousal and no evidence of dissonance reduction using this physiological approach. We consequently reconsider (albeit optimistically) the use of physiology in future work on cognitive dissonance. We also discuss the implications of our findings for selective exposure and motivated reasoning.

2007 ◽  
Vol 38 (1) ◽  
pp. 7-16 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eddie Harmon-Jones ◽  
Cindy Harmon-Jones

Abstract. Research and theoretical developments on the theory of cognitive dissonance are reviewed. After considering the self-consistency, self-affirmation, and aversive consequences revisions, the authors review research that has challenged each of the revisions and that supports the original version of the theory. Then, the authors review the action-based model of dissonance, which accepts the original theory's proposal that a sufficient cognitive inconsistency causes dissonance and extends the original theory by proposing why cognitive inconsistency prompts dissonance. Finally, the authors present results from experiments examining predictions derived from the action-based model and neural processes involved in dissonance reduction.


2002 ◽  
Vol 91 (2) ◽  
pp. 527-532 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dave D'Alessio ◽  
Mike Allen

Well-known literature reviews from the 1960s question whether cognitive dissonance underlies experimental participants' selective exposure of themselves to consonant messages and avoidance of dissonant ones. A meta-analytic review of 16 studies published from 1956 to 1996 and involving 1,922 total participants shows that experimental tests consistently support the supposition that dissonance is associated with selective exposure ( r = .22, p < .001). Statistical power exceeded .99. Advances in statistical methodology and increased attention to selecting appropriate tests of dissonance theory were essential to finally resolving this question.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Douglas Lee ◽  
Jean Daunizeau

ABSTRACTFor more than 60 years, it has been known that people report higher (lower) subjective values for items after having selected (rejected) them during a choice task. This phenomenon is coined “choice-induced preference change” or CIPC, and its established interpretation is that of “cognitive dissonance” theory. In brief, if people feel uneasy about their choice, they later convince themselves, albeit not always consciously, that the chosen (rejected) item was actually better (worse) than they had originally estimated. While this might make sense from a pragmatic psychological standpoint, it is challenging from a theoretical evolutionary perspective. This is because such a cognitive mechanism might yield irrational biases, whose adaptive fitness would be unclear. In this work, we assume that CIPC is mostly driven by the refinement of option value representations that occurs during (and not after) difficult choices. This makes CIPC the epiphenomenal outcome of a cognitive process that is instrumental to the decision. Critically, our hypothesis implies novel predictions about how observed CIPC should relate to two specific meta-cognitive processes, namely: choice confidence and subjective certainty regarding pre-choice value judgments. We test these predictions in a behavioral experiment where participants rate the subjective value of food items both before and after choosing between equally valued items; we augment this traditional design with reports of choice confidence and subjective certainty about value judgments. The results confirm our predictions and provide evidence against the standard post-choice cognitive dissonance reduction explanation. We then discuss the relevance of our work in the context of the existing debate regarding the putative cognitive mechanisms underlying cognitive dissonance reduction.


1967 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 286-290 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leonard A. Losciuto ◽  
Robert Perloff

As predicted by cognitive dissonance theory, people choosing between desirable products subsequently rated the chosen product as more desirable and the unchosen as less desirable. They had also greater retention of written material about the chosen alternative; though this trend was not statistically significant.


1978 ◽  
Vol 1 (4) ◽  
pp. 355-362 ◽  
Author(s):  
Piero Amerio ◽  
Ellenis Bosotti ◽  
Franca Amione

The cognitive consistency in social behaviour was analysed in ninety pre-school children within the context of the cognitive dissonance theory in the forced compliance paradigm. The aim of the experiment was to ascertain the effect of the dissonance reduction process on the internalization of social norms in a resistance-to-deviation situation creating dissonance. The procedure involved tempting a child to engage in counterattitudinal behaviour (not playing with the desired toy). The child was given either a sufflcient (severe threat of punishment) or insufficient (mild threat) justification for not performing the activity. As predicted from dissonance theory, the smaller the threat, the greater the dissonance and it was reduced by derogating the forbidden toy. Dissonance reduction implications in socialization are validated: the children who were threatened least were the most likely to internalize a norm not to play. Self-awareness processes are involved.


1969 ◽  
Vol 33 (4) ◽  
pp. 44-49 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sadaomi Oshikawa

Cognitive dissonance theory is applicable to very limited areas of consumer behavior according to the author. Published findings in support of the theory are equivocal; they fail to show that cognitive dissonance is the only possible cause of observed “dissonance-reducing” behavior. Experimental evidences are examined and their weaknesses pointed out by the author to justify his position. He also provides suggestions regarding the circumstances under which dissonance reduction may be useful in increasing the repurchase probability of a purchased brand.


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