Pupillometry and Hindsight Bias: Physiological Arousal Predicts Compensatory Behavior

Volume: 12, Issue: 7, Pages: 1146 - 1154
Published: Nov 10, 2020
Abstract
According to violation–compensation models of cognitive conflict, experiences that violate expected associations evoke a common, biologically based syndrome of aversive arousal, which in turn motivates compensation efforts to relieve this arousal. However, while substantial research shows that people indeed respond with increased arousal to expectancy violating events, evidence for the motivating role of arousal is rarely found. In two...
Paper Details
Title
Pupillometry and Hindsight Bias: Physiological Arousal Predicts Compensatory Behavior
Published Date
Nov 10, 2020
Volume
12
Issue
7
Pages
1146 - 1154
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