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Automatic optimism: Biased use of base rate information for positive and negative events
Authors:Heather C. Lench
Affiliation:Department of Psychology and Social Behavior, University of California, 3340 Social Ecology Building II, Irvine, CA 92697-7085, USA
Abstract:People generally judge that positive events will occur in their lives and negative events will not, even when both events have the same objective likelihood to occur. In four studies, we examined the possibility that this optimistic bias is the result of people’s automatic affective reactions to future events. Studies 1 and 2 demonstrate, in two different contexts, that people are consistently optimistic in their predictions, despite identical base rates for positive and negative events. In Study 2, optimistic bias was not influenced by incentives for motivated reasoning or rewards for accuracy, suggesting that bias was the result of automatic processes. Studies 3 and 4 showed that optimistic bias was more pronounced when predictions were speeded and when participants made predictions after exposure to affectively valenced words. Together, these findings suggest that people optimistically interpret base rates and that this optimism is due to an effortless affective process.
Keywords:Optimism   Optimistic bias   Base rates   Bias   Implicit bias   Affect heuristic   Likelihood judgments
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