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Numbers and statistics are necessary and great for exposing the truth, but theyâre not enough to change beliefs, and they are almost useless for motivating action.
The huge amount of information we are receiving today can make us even less sensitive to data because weâve become accustomed to finding support for anything we want to believe, with a simple click of the mouse. Instead, our desires are what shape our beliefs.
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An attempt to change someoneâs mind will be successful if it aligns with the core elements that govern how we think:
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While we adore data, the problem with an approach that prioritizes information and logic is that it ignores the core of what makes you and me human: our motives, our fears, our hopes and desires.
Data has only a limited capacity to alter the strong opinions of others. Established beliefs can be extremely resistant to change, even when scientific evidence is provided to undermine those beliefs.
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This happens when people are presented with information that contradicts their opinion and they come up with altogether new counterarguments that further strengthen their original view.
When you provide someone with new data, they quickly accept evidence that confirms their prior beliefs and assess counterevidence with a critical eye.Â
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In todayâs world, the ease by which we can find âdataâ and âevidenceâ to discredit any opinionâand, at the same time, uncover new information to support our ownâis unprecedented.
Paradoxically then, the wealth of available information makes us more resistant to change, because it is so easy to find data that support our own vision.
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The greater your cognitive capacity, the greater your ability to rationalize and interpret information at will, and to creatively twist data to fit your opinions.
People with stronger analytic abilities are more likely to twist data at will than people with low reasoning ability.Â
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Emotion equates the physiological state of the listener with that of the speaker, which makes it more likely that the listener will process incoming information in a similar manner to how the speaker sees it.
If I feel happy and you feel sad, we are unlikely to interpret the same story in the same way. But if I can first help you feel as happy as I do, perhaps by sharing a joke, you will be more likely to construe my message the way I do.
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Tweeting is one of the most emotionally arousing activities you likely engage in on most days. Studies show that tweeting raises your pulse, makes you sweat, and enlarges your pupilsâall indicators of arousal.
Relative to just browsing the Web, tweeting and retweeting enhances brain activity indicative of emotional arousal by 75 percent. Simply reading your feed increases your emotional arousal by 65 percent.
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It states that we approach those people, items, and events we believe can do us good and avoid those that can do us harm.
In other words, we move toward pleasure and away from pain.Â
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The difficulty in trying to change peopleâs behavior by warning them of the spread of disease, loss of money, weight gain, or global warming is that these are all uncertain future sticks.Â
It is hard to convince people work for something that may or may not happen. This is why a threat of momentous future harm can sometimes be less effective than a minor reward that is immediate and certain.Â
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Because we often experience better outcomes following choice, the association between choice and reward has become so strong in our minds that choice itself has become rewarding.
However, sometimes the decision is so complex and taxing that we prefer not to make a decision. For example, if you give people too many options, they become overwhelmed and donât choose anything.
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Information gaps make people feel uncomfortable while filling them is satisfying. If you possess information that can fill existing gaps in peopleâs knowledge, remind them of those gaps.Â
Consider online clickbait such as âThe ten celebrities you never knew were enthusiastic gardenersâ or âThe three politicians you never knew got a nose job.â Those create gaps of knowledge in peopleâs mind that were not there to begin with.
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This is our ability to think about what other people are thinking. We think constantly about what the other person is thinking and adjust our behavior accordingly.Â
While the tendency to engage in theory of mind is usefulâit helps us relate to one another and predict what people will do nextâthe human mind is not a perfect inference machine, and inevitably we will, at times, reach the wrong conclusions.
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IDEAS CURATED BY
CURATOR'S NOTE
<p data-selectable-paragraph="">A cutting-edge, research-based inquiry into how we influence those around us and how understanding the brain can help us change minds for the better. In The Influential Mind, neuroscientist Tali Sharot takes us on a thrilling exploration of the nature of influence. We all have a duty to affect othersâfrom the classroom to the boardroom to social media. But how skilled are we at this role, and can we become better? It turns out that many of our instinctsâfrom relying on facts and figures to shape opinions, to insisting others are wrong or attempting to exert controlâare ineffective, because they are incompatible with how peopleâs minds operate. Sharot shows us how to avoid these pitfalls, and how an attempt to change beliefs and actions is successful when it is well-matched with the core elements that govern the human brain. Sharot reveals the critical role of emotion in influence, the weakness of data and the power of curiosity. Relying on the latest research in neuroscience, behavioral economics and psychology, the book provides fascinating insight into the complex power of influence, good and bad.</p>
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