Report Science: 80 percent of humans are delusionally optimistic.

tom_mai78101

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Most of us hold unrealistically optimistic views of the future, research shows, downplaying the likelihood that we will have bad experiences. Now a study in Nature Neuroscience last October has found clues to the brain’s predilection for the positive, identifying regions that may fuel this “optimism bias” by preferentially responding to rosier information.

Tali Sharot, a University College London neurology researcher, and her colleagues asked 19 individuals between the ages of 19 and 27 to estimate their odds of experiencing 80 unfavorable events, such as contracting various diseases or being the victim of a crime. Participants were then told the actual average probability of each before repeating the exercise.

The participants revised most of their estimates the second time around, but 79 percent of those tested paid much more attention when their actual risk was lower than what they had initially guessed. After getting the good news, these subjects rated their risk for these events as significantly lower than they did earlier. In contrast, when they had underestimated their odds of meeting with a particular misfortune, they made less drastic revisions to their guess or none at all—clinging to their earlier belief that they would probably avoid the bad luck.

 
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Accname

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They asked 19 individuals???
What is wrong with the studies these days? They dont even try to convince anybody anymore.
It is as if researchers nowadays believe that we are all stupid or something and cannot read half of their reviews.
 

Bronxernijn

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a group of 19 individuals is not a valid sample size. Experiment discredited.
 

DDRtists

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a group of 19 individuals is not a valid sample size. Experiment discredited.

Bingo. Besides, is there a negative side to being delusionally optimistic? If you believe the better of things, and your mood is benefited due to this, I don't see why this is a bad thing. Would the rather people be pessimistic? Lol
 

FireCat

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That study sucks. Well, they could at least test 15000 individuals! Right?
 

Slapshot136

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That study sucks. Well, they could at least test 15000 individuals! Right?

you really need about 1000 or so in order to get proper diversity - after that it depends how close your findings are if you should get a larger sample or not, and what your ultimate goal is: if it's for some type of medicine, you will need a larger sample to prove it's safety, etc.
 

DDRtists

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That study sucks. Well, they could at least test 15000 individuals! Right?

I invite you to give us your better study from your group of 15,000+ people. Until then, I don't really think you have much room to say it sucks. It's more than you're doing. :)
 

FireCat

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II don't really think you have much room to say it sucks
The world's population is around 6,974,289,820 + and counting.
So a group of 19 individuals of that number. hmm So it doesn't sucks?
 

phyrex1an

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They asked 19 individuals???
What is wrong with the studies these days? They dont even try to convince anybody anymore.
It is as if researchers nowadays believe that we are all stupid or something and cannot read half of their reviews.
The purpose of the study was to find which brain centras that was active when adjusting ones personal believes, not finding how many who are "delusionally optimistic". 19 people is a decent sample size when doing brain scans, though they probably still needs to add caveats for cultural differences. Reading the article you'll find that they do a statistical significance test that at least can't be considered obviously wrong at a first glance, but keep in mind that their sample isn't selected from the entire human population.

Reading the articles abstract and it becomes crystal clear that they consider human delusional optimism a priori for the purpose of the study and are only concerned with the brain patterns that are observed when being overly optimistic.
 

Varine

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New headline: 15 people are delusionally optimistic.
 

phyrex1an

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So you say this article is showing the study in a wrong way?
No. I'm saying that the article talks about both the study and the body of knowledge that existed before the study was made, and that you are conflicting the two. Possibly because the article doesn't make that distinction obvious and that Toms title here at thehelper ("Science: 80 percent of humans are delusionally optimistic") talks about the previous research but the news articles title ("Neural Responses Reveal Our Optimistic Bent") talks about the study. I'm guessing that the news article title was changed after tom made his post here, probably because it isn't representative of the news article content.

The study wasn't about how many % of the population which are "overly optimistic", but it's consistent with previous research which showed that. This is precisely what the news article says, if you take your time reading where the different information comes from:

Now a study in Nature Neuroscience last October has found clues to the brain’s predilection for the positive, identifying regions that may fuel this “optimism bias” by preferentially responding to rosier information.
This line presents what the new study resulted in.

The participants revised most of their estimates the second time around, but 79 percent of those tested paid much more attention when their actual risk was lower than what they had initially guessed.
This line presents how many of the 19 people in the study which had the "optimism bias". Don't conflict this with a statement about the population at large, it just says that 15 people of the 19 had the effect they wanted to study (they actually study 2 different kinds of bias, but the other one was present in 100% of the tested individuals).

This finding jibes with past studies that observed an optimism bias in about 80 percent of the population.
This line presents the reason for believing that the "optimism bias" exists in the population at large, and that the new study doesn't offer any evidence to the contrary.
 

Accname

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I dont read the articles in general beyond what is shown here at the helper.
In the part of the article shown here, the intention of the study is not getting clear for me at all.
 

phyrex1an

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I dont read the articles in general beyond what is shown here at the helper.
In the part of the article shown here, the intention of the study is not getting clear for me at all.
I agree. We can't reproduce the article in it's entirely here on thehelper (due to copyright issues and because we think it's rather unfair too the news sites). If it's a topic that interests you too the degree that you want to comment on it I recommend that you read the entire news article first. Tom makes an awesome job posting interesting science news but it's not always that the portion he posts here gives the entire story ^^
 

Accname

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I wouldnt waste my time to read an entire article if i read somewhere at the beginning that the sample size is 19 people. I think this was an unlucky quote from the article.
 
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