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mere exposure effect

mere exposure effect

Mar 14, 2024

  • psychology/social

The mere-exposure effect is a psychological phenomenon where we tend to prefer things that we are more familiar with. It is also sometimes called the familiarity principle in social psychology.

This bias seems to be applied in all kind of ways. In relationship, we like a person more when we have more exposure to them. In the context of learning, we tend to repeatedly reread source materials even though it does not help learning.

References

  • Wikipedia: Mere-exposure effect

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Backlinks

  • criticism of progressive summarization
  • highlighting is ineffective
  • repeatedly reread sources does not help learning
  • social psychology

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