Insecurity and False Pattern Recognition

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Mayabird
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Insecurity and False Pattern Recognition

Post by Mayabird »

Insecure Minds Wired for Pattern-Finding
Larry O'Hanlon, Discovery News

Oct. 2, 2008 -- A perfectly healthy human mind can trick itself into seeing things that are not there, and new research has exposed exactly the sort of conditions under which that happens.

It turns out that the less control a person feels, the more likely they are to see patterns or make connections that don't exist. The good news is there is a way to fortify yourself against this sort of hard-wired self-deception.

"It's true that having control is a big thing for most people," said researcher Adam Galinsky of Northwestern University. Galinsky is a co-author of a paper reporting on new experiments into the matter, which appears in the Oct. 3 issue of the journal Science. "We showed that it's a very significant problem."

Previous research had hinted at the details of the strange human habit, said Galinsky. A study in the 1970s showed how during hard economic times people read more astrology books and columns (astronomy reading was unchanged, for comparison). There is also evidence that UFO sightings ramp up in times of high national stress.

These phenomena are probably related to that found by Galinsky and lead author Jennifer Whitson of the University of Texas, Austin, under controlled conditions in the lab.

Whitson and Galinsky designed six experiments in which some people were made to feel a lack of control and others were not. Then they measured the subjects' perception of images in pictures that contained both hard-to-see patterns or no pattern at all. In another experiment, the researchers tested how people perceive patterns in stock prices.

Overall, the researchers found that the subjects who were made to feel less control perceived significantly more illusory patterns or connections.

"Having a sense of control has a wide variety of adaptive advantages," Whitson told Discovery News. "Not only are people who feel in control less likely to see things that aren't there and end up chasing ghosts, but there are also a wide variety of health and societal benefits."

When people feel in control of a medical procedure, for instance, they've been shown to recover more quickly, Whitson said. When people feel in control they can also endure longer and more intense pain.

"This is the first study I've seen that really ties the lack of control to pattern perception," said Benjamin Radford, a science-based paranormal investigator for the Center for Inquiry and editor of Skeptical Inquirer magazine. "A lack of control leads a lot of people to superstition."

Rubbing a rabbit's foot, knocking on wood or wearing only a certain "lucky" shirt to a casino are all examples of superstitions that give people a better sense of control, Radford explained, to offer a few harmless examples.

Conspiracy theories and even political exploitation of this quirk in human perception could be more serious. Disproven and illusory political concepts such as the idea that immigration is harmful to the U.S. economy or that Saddam Hussein was involved in the Sept. 11 attacks find fertile ground in minds that are feeling less and less secure, said Galinsky.

Fortunately, Whitson and Galinsky have also found that when their subjects underwent "self-affirmation" exercises to give them a better sense of control and security, the illusions went away.

"Feeling secure is part and parcel of feeling in control," Whitson explained. "When people can affirm the self they are less likely to underperform in the face of negative stereotypes, to act defensively or aggressively or prejudicially."

In fact, feeling secure by self-affirmation reduces all sorts of defensive thoughts and behaviors. Even some psychotherapy is based on this idea.

"Give a person a sense of security and control, and defensiveness and obsessiveness melt away," said Whitson.

On the more spectacular UFO, Bigfoot, Loch Ness Monster level, however, the bottom line is even more straightforward.

"The take-home message is that just because we perceive something," said Radford, "it doesn't mean it's really there."
I'm sure we're all thinking the same thing here.

http://dsc.discovery.com/news/2008/10/0 ... ttern.html
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Re: Insecurity and False Pattern Recognition

Post by Zixinus »

Where is the part where it tells us how to defend ourselves from such misconceptions?
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Re: Insecurity and False Pattern Recognition

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Zixinus wrote:Where is the part where it tells us how to defend ourselves from such misconceptions?
Carl Sagan wrote that part: The Fine Art of Boloney Detection. Check it out.
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Re: Insecurity and False Pattern Recognition

Post by Kodiak »

Mayabird wrote:
I'm sure we're all thinking the same thing here.
That would be....?

I for one am thinking of the autism-vaccine link and the parents who are adamant that their children are victims of a conspiracy. I just saw Jenn McCarthy on cnn a few days ago talking about how some new-age diet and vitamins had "cured" her son's autism. Never mind that dozens and dozens of autism cases disappear as mysteriously as they came on and nobody knows why :roll:
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Re: Insecurity and False Pattern Recognition

Post by Zixinus »

That would be....?
Religion?
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Re: Insecurity and False Pattern Recognition

Post by Mayabird »

Zixinus wrote:
That would be....?
Religion?
Yeah, that's what I mostly implied, with a side of the anti-vaccine crap since that comes up a lot on the board.

Also, the only "advice" the article gave for defending ourselves was "having high self-esteem" which is barely advice at all. I was rather disappointed in that regard.
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Re: Insecurity and False Pattern Recognition

Post by Dooey Jo »

I was thinking how neatly it goes with my observations about the "victims" on those paranormal shows on TV. Like this one where a woman had married a guy who later turned out to be an asshole, that one day "disappeared" and never returned. Except he wasn't an asshole, it was of course teh ghosts that were turning him evil.

Ghosts also seem to really like haunting white trash...
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Re: Insecurity and False Pattern Recognition

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It's more fun, haunting people who actually believe in your existence.
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Re: Insecurity and False Pattern Recognition

Post by Elaro »

Ah, well, that explains my bout of the stupid.

Last spring I went through an emotional upheaval that made me doubt myself. Not to say that I doubted my view of the world, but my fundamental intent (i.e. "Am I a good/intelligent/functional person?"* a.k.a. "Am I able to process information in order to reach the proper conclusion?"). Anyway, the most striking thing I remember from that time (which is still in part going on) is that I was making associations left, right and center, and that I was accepting them blindly. For example, somehow I got it into my head that there was some kind of battle raging in my head, between good/light and evil/dark, and that the latter was a sort of alien thought/presence. It was linked to how stressed out I was feeling at the time. Fucking wierd.

* And religious thought absolutely did have a positive impact, but I knew better.
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Re: Insecurity and False Pattern Recognition

Post by Superman »

People do indeed seem to have a basic need to feel as if they're somehow in control. The rituals people that people perform, like a gambler who thinks his lucky charm positively affects his chances of winning, are all aimed at having the same outcome; exerting some kind of control over the randomness of life.

I think that this also has a lot to do with why some people believe in grand conspiracies. On some level, the idea that the government orchestrated the attacks on the World Trade Centers is much more acceptable than it being a random attack perpetrated by terrorists. Whether it's the 9/11 attacks, the idea that vaccines cause autism, or even the belief that a god created the planet in the way that the Bible describes, you notice that random events never happen. There are no accidents in life, and that's a whole lot safer than realizing that an asteroid could wipe us all out at any given time.

As wrong as he may have been about other things, Freud postulated that religion exists as a type of "universal neurosis." He argued that people believe and practice religion just as someone with OCD performs rituals; on some level, they believe they're exerting control in their lives. I'm pretty sure that Plato even touched on this in some of his writings.
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Re: Insecurity and False Pattern Recognition

Post by Garlak »

This isn't exactly a new concept, nor the application of it to religion. :-) MARX called religion an opium. When people are stressed and feel helpless... they want a goal, an explanation, or a target. They ask themselves "Why?" and whomever can provide an answer, gets their attention and at least plants a seed.

As for conspiracy theorists? Maybe they're looking for reasons to dislike/distrust the government.. they might feel "the man" is responsible for some of the crap in real life, or isn't doing enough to help... so invent stuff government does to justify where "all that effort" goes and paint a bullseye. I don't know. I'm not a psychiatrist, just a guy interested in anthropology!

Speaking of, cultural anthropology gives an interesting view of "religion." Namely that rituals are just what the article said--ways of calming you down. Letting off stress, "appeasing" angry spirits/gods.. Rituals help make you feel in control. It's no wonder people do stupid things when stressed; think about in what shape Germany was after the Great War and the Nazi party's rise to power is even scarier in being able to see the steps...

And if rituals make you feel in control, it's no wonder religion (using it as a broad, general term) caught on millenia ago; people didn't have answers for why they got sick, or injured, or what would happen when they died. And it's built up so much inertia over the centuries. Of course, we're now seeing some of the downsides to it; religion is a method of imparting information, views and attitudes. So any POV that gets attached to it, sticks. Unfortunately people tend to focus on stuff like abortion or creation.

People being stupid isn't just a case of "catching a case of OMGRELIGION" but of being indoctrinated into thinking and viewing the world in a certain way. Anybody raised to be stupid, will be stupid... religion is just a convenient pre-packaged mindset. One that, unfortunately, by it's very nature rejects reasonable observation of morals, ethics and/or metaphysics in it's worst cases. (i.e. Some religious people will simply stick to their views and 'reject' "logic..." because they haven't been brought up to think things through logically, but given answers to problems, with lots of positive and negative reinforcement.)
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