Have you ever lost a friend to misperception? Have you lost a friend or a family member to the idea that your views got so different, that it was time to end the relationship 鈥 perhaps by unfriending each other on Facebook?
As it turns out, we often think our ideological differences are far greater than they actually are. Which means: we鈥檙e losing relationships and getting mired in polarization based on warped visions of each other.听
This week on Your 水果派 Attention, we're talking with Adam Mastroianni, a postdoctoral research scholar at Columbia Business School who studies how we perceive and misperceive our social worlds. Together with Adam, we're going to explore how accurate 鈥 and inaccurate 鈥 our views of each other are. As you listen to our conversation, keep in mind that relationship you might have lost to misperception, and that you might be able to revive as a result of what you hear.
CORRECTIONS: In the episode, Adam says in 1978, 85% of people said they'd vote for a Black president, but the is 80.4%. Tristan says that Republicans estimate that more than a third of Democrats are LGBTQ, but the is 32%. Finally, Tristan refers to Anil Seth's notion of cognitive impenetrability, but that term was by the Canadian cognitive scientist and philosopher Zenon W. Pylyshyn.
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Adam Mastroianni's research paper showing how stereotypes of the past lead people to misperceive attitude change, and how these misperceptions can lend legitimacy to policies that people may not actually prefer
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Adam's blog, where he shares original data and thinks through ideas
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Academic study showing that Americans are living in what researchers called a 鈥渇alse social reality鈥 with respect to misperceptions about climate views