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Define confirmation bias and state the primary consequence this cognitive shortcut has on an individual's pre-existing assumptions when they encounter contradicting evidence.

Question: Define confirmation bias and state the primary consequence this cognitive shortcut has on an individual's pre-existing assumptions when they encounter contradicting evidence.

Sample answer: Confirmation bias is the cognitive tendency to selectively focus on cases that validate our pre-existing intuitive beliefs while actively disregarding or forgetting cases that contradict them. The primary consequence of this mental shortcut is that it leads individuals to reinforce incorrect assumptions by ignoring disconfirming evidence.

Key points:

  • Selective focus on cases that validate pre-existing intuitive beliefs.
  • Active disregard or forgetting of contradicting cases.
  • Reinforcing incorrect assumptions by ignoring disconfirming evidence.

Rubric: The response must define confirmation bias as selectively focusing on validating cases and disregarding/forgetting contradicting cases, and state that its consequence is reinforcing incorrect assumptions by ignoring disconfirming evidence.

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Updated 2026-05-26

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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

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