Title of article
The tree to the left, the forest to the right: Political attitude and perceptual bias
Author/Authors
Caparos، نويسنده , , Serge and Fortier-St-Pierre، نويسنده , , Simon and Gosselin، نويسنده , , Jérémie and Blanchette، نويسنده , , Isabelle and Brisson، نويسنده , , Benoit، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2015
Pages
10
From page
155
To page
164
Abstract
A prominent model suggests that individuals to the right of the political spectrum are more cognitively rigid and less tolerant of ambiguity than individuals to the left. On the basis of this model, we predicted that a psychological mechanism linked to the resolution of visual ambiguity – perceptual bias – would be linked to political attitude. Perceptual bias causes western individuals to favour a global interpretation when scrutinizing ambiguous hierarchical displays (e.g., alignment of trees) that can be perceived either in terms of their local elements (e.g., several trees) or in terms of their global structure (e.g., a forest). Using three tasks (based on Navon-like hierarchical figures or on the Ebbinghaus illusion), we demonstrate (1) that right-oriented Westerners present a stronger bias towards global perception than left-oriented Westerners and (2) that this stronger bias is linked to higher cognitive rigidity. This study establishes for the first time that political ideology, a high-level construct, is directly reflected in low-level perception. Right- and left-oriented individuals actually see the world differently.
Keywords
Political attitudes , Ebbinghaus illusion , Navon , Cognitive rigidity , Local/global bias , visual perception
Journal title
Cognition
Serial Year
2015
Journal title
Cognition
Record number
2078285
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