Summary: Psychologists revealed people’s judgments of truthfulness are influenced by what they perceive as the information source’s intentions.
They found that even when individuals knew the factual accuracy of a claim, their judgment of its truth was affected by whether they thought the source was trying to deceive or inform them. This tendency held true for both politicized and non-politicized topics.
This research uncovers a new facet of truth perception, showing that objective accuracy is not the only criterion considered.
Comments are closed.