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17 November 2021 The psychophysiological correlates of cognitive dissonance
Gavin W. Ploger, Johnanna Dunaway, Patrick Fournier, Stuart Soroka
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Abstract

This preregistered study uses a combination of physiological measures to explore both the activation and reduction components of cognitive dissonance theory. More precisely, we use skin conductance to identify dissonance arousal, a short-term affective response to counter-attitudinal stimuli, and then use heart rate variability to measure dissonance reduction, which reflects longer-term patterns of emotional regulation and information processing. Our preliminary tests find weak evidence of dissonance arousal and no evidence of dissonance reduction using this physiological approach. We consequently reconsider (albeit optimistically) the use of physiology in future work on cognitive dissonance. We also discuss the implications of our findings for selective exposure and motivated reasoning.

Gavin W. Ploger, Johnanna Dunaway, Patrick Fournier, and Stuart Soroka "The psychophysiological correlates of cognitive dissonance," Politics and the Life Sciences 40(2), 202-212, (17 November 2021). https://doi.org/10.1017/pls.2021.15
Published: 17 November 2021
JOURNAL ARTICLE
11 PAGES

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KEYWORDS
cognitive dissonance
dissonance arousal
dissonance reduction
news exposure
psychophysiology
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