Abstract:
Individuals often exhibit a systematic preference for decision consistent information, a
phenomenon known as the congeniality bias. The current study utilized event related potential
methodology to investigate the neural underpinnings of the congeniality bias by examining the
cognitive resources devoted to processing decision consistent and decision inconsistent
information. Results revealed participants devoted substantially more attentional resources to
processing decision consistent information during the decision making process. This finding
supports the role of a defensive motivation, driven by a desire to maintain cognitive consistency,
in the congeniality bias. Discussion concerns implications for interventions designed to reduce
the strength of congeniality bias by altering the allocation of attentional resources during
decision making.