How Does Explained in 60 Seconds: The Psychology of Misinformation Work?

Imagine you're playing a game where someone tells you something that sounds true, but it’s actually not. That's misinformation, and your brain can get tricked by it, just like how you might believe a silly story if it's told with enough excitement.

Why Your Brain Believes Lies

Your brain is like a detective trying to solve mysteries every day. When someone tells you something new, your brain checks it against what it already knows. If the new thing fits in nicely with what it already believes, it goes "Hmm, that makes sense!" and accepts it as true.

But if the new thing is strange or confusing, your brain might think, "Wait a minute... did I just hear that right?" That's when you start doubting, like when you're told something unexpected at bedtime and you have to think about whether it really happened.

How Misinformation Spreads

Sometimes, people tell lies on purpose. Maybe they want to make you laugh or trick you into thinking something silly is true. It's like when a friend tells you a joke that’s not funny at first, but then it becomes the best joke ever once you hear it again.

Your brain can get confused by these little tricks, and before you know it, you're believing something that wasn't real at all, just like how sometimes you believe the biggest silly stories your friends tell you.

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Examples

  1. A child thinks the sun follows them because it always seems to move with them.
  2. Someone believes a fake celebrity endorsement without checking the facts.
  3. A friend shares a story about a miracle healing, and you believe it right away.

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