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Fernando Brandini Blanco

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  •  Publications
    6
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  • All publications (6)
  •  2
    Thinking fast and biased: intuitive thinking style is associated with the illusion of causality
    with María Manuela Moreno-Fernández and Helena Matute
    Consciousness and Cognition 141 (C): 104045. 2026.
    Cognitive Sciences
  •  55
    Causal Illusions in the Service of Political Attitudes in Spain and the United Kingdom
    with Braulio Gómez-Fortes and Helena Matute
    Frontiers in Psychology 9. 2018.
    Philosophy of Cognitive Science
  •  119
    When Success Is Not Enough: The Symptom Base-Rate Can Influence Judgments of Effectiveness of a Successful Treatment
    with María Manuela Moreno-Fernández and Helena Matute
    Frontiers in Psychology 11. 2020.
    Patients’ beliefs about the effectiveness of their treatments are key to the success of any intervention. However, since these beliefs are usually formed by sequentially accumulating evidence in the form of the covariation between the treatment use and the symptoms, it is not always easy to detect when a treatment is actually working. In Experiments 1 and 2, we presented participants with a contingency learning task in which a fictitious treatment was actually effective to reduce the symptoms of…Read more
    Patients’ beliefs about the effectiveness of their treatments are key to the success of any intervention. However, since these beliefs are usually formed by sequentially accumulating evidence in the form of the covariation between the treatment use and the symptoms, it is not always easy to detect when a treatment is actually working. In Experiments 1 and 2, we presented participants with a contingency learning task in which a fictitious treatment was actually effective to reduce the symptoms of fictitious patients. However, the base-rate of the symptoms was manipulated so that, for half of participants, the symptoms were very frequent before the treatment, whereas for the rest of participants, the symptoms were less frequently observed. Although the treatment was equally effective in all cases according to the objective contingency between the treatment and healings, the participants’ beliefs on the effectiveness of the treatment were influenced by the base-rate of the symptoms, so that those who observed frequent symptoms before the treatment tended to produce lower judgments of effectiveness. Experiment 3 showed that participants were probably basing their judgments on an estimate of effectiveness relative to the symptom base-rate, rather than on contingency in absolute terms. Data, materials, and R scripts to reproduce the figures are publicly available at the Open Science Framework.
    Philosophy of Cognitive Science
  •  177
    Illusions of causality: how they bias our everyday thinking and how they could be reduced
    with Helena Matute, Ion Yarritu, Marcos Díaz-Lago, Miguel A. Vadillo, and Itxaso Barberia
    Frontiers in Psychology 6. 2015.
    Philosophy of Cognitive Science
  •  57
    Editorial: Understanding and Overcoming Biases in Judgment and Decision-Making With Real-Life Consequences
    with Yasmina Okan, Dafina Petrova, Monica Capra, and José C. Perales
    Frontiers in Psychology 13. 2022.
    Cognitive Sciences
  •  20
    Positive and negative implications of the causal illusion
    Consciousness and Cognition 50 56-68. 2017.
    Consciousness and Psychology
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