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itsadok | 9 years ago

This is similar to the "Contamination" effect, of how completely false statements can affect a person's judgement, even if they are told the statement are false.

http://lesswrong.com/lw/k3/priming_and_contamination/ http://lesswrong.com/lw/k4/do_we_believe_everything_were_tol...

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XaYdEk|9 years ago

I don't know, the Contamination effect seems more like buffer overflow in our neural network and the Repetition effect more like a poor implementation of caching.