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The Little Albert controversy: intuition, confirmation bias and logic

Faculty Advisor

Date

2020

Keywords

Watson, Little Albert, fallacies, confirmation bias, logic

Abstract (summary)

This article uses the recent controversy about Little Albert’s identity as an example of a fine case study of problems that can befall psychologist-historians and historians who are unaware of their tacit assumptions. Because bias and logical errors are engrained in human habits of mind, we can all succumb to them under certain conditions unless we are vigilant in guarding against them. The search for Little Albert suggests 2 persistent issues: (a) confirmation bias and (b) that overconfidence in a belief detracts from reasoning because logical errors are intuitive and seem reasonable. This article uses cognitive psychology as a framework for understanding why these issues might have arisen in the Albert research and passed the scrutiny of peer review. In closing, the article turns to historians’ writings to gain insight into rules of thumb and heuristics that psychologist-historians and historians can use to mitigate these concerns.

Publication Information

Digdon, N. (2020). The Little Albert controversy: Intuition, confirmation bias and logic. History of Psychology, 23(2), 122.-131. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1037/hop0000055

Notes

Item Type

Article

Language

English

Rights

All Rights Reserved