TopicNeuroscience

misinformation

Content Overview
3Total items
2ePosters
1Seminar

Latest

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

How People Form Beliefs

Tali Sharot
University College London
Oct 15, 2022

In this talk I will present our recent behavioural and neuroscience research on how the brain motivates itself to form particular beliefs and why it does so. I will propose that the utility of a belief is derived from the potential outcomes associated with holding it. Outcomes can be internal (e.g., positive/negative feelings) or external (e.g., material gain/loss), and only some are dependent on belief accuracy. We show that belief change occurs when the potential outcomes of holding it alters, for example when moving from a safe environment to a threatening environment. Our findings yield predictions about how belief formation alters as a function of mental health. We test these predictions using a linguistic analysis of participants’ web searches ‘in the wild’ to quantify the affective properties of information they consume and relate those to reported psychiatric symptoms. Finally, I will present a study in which we used our framework to alter the incentive structure of social media platforms to reduce the spread of misinformation and improve belief accuracy.

ePosterNeuroscience

IT’S NOT NAMS VERSUS ANIMAL RESEARCH: DEBUNKING KEY MISINFORMATION IN NEUROSCIENCE

Helena Pinheiro, Monique Sundin, Inês Serrenho, Georgios Petrellis, Nuno Gonçalves, Kirk Leech

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

MEMORY CONTROL PROCESSES IN REAL-WORLD MISINFORMATION JUDGMENTS

Delaram Sadeghzadeh, Paul W. Burgess

FENS Forum 2026

misinformation coverage

3 items

ePoster2
Seminar1

Share your knowledge

Know something about misinformation? Help the community by contributing seminars, talks, or research.

Contribute content
Domain spotlight

Explore how misinformation research is advancing inside Neuroscience.

Visit domain

Cookies

We use essential cookies to run the site. Analytics cookies are optional and help us improve World Wide. Learn more.