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  1. Restructuring insight: An integrative review of insight in problem-solving, meditation, psychotherapy, delusions and psychedelics.Kadi Tulver, Karl Kristjan Kaup, Ruben Laukkonen & Jaan Aru - 2023 - Consciousness and Cognition 110 (C):103494.
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  • Aha! under pressure: The Aha! experience is not constrained by cognitive load.Hans Stuyck, Axel Cleeremans & Eva Van den Bussche - 2022 - Cognition 219 (C):104946.
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  • Insight problem solving ability predicts reduced susceptibility to fake news, bullshit, and overclaiming.Carola Salvi, Nathaniel Barr, Joseph E. Dunsmoor & Jordan Grafman - 2023 - Thinking and Reasoning 29 (4):760-784.
    1. False information takes many shapes. While misinformation has long been a feature of conveying the human experience to others, the rise of the internet and social media has created conditions in...
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  • Current Understanding of the “Insight” Phenomenon Across Disciplines.Antonio J. Osuna-Mascaró & Alice M. I. Auersperg - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Despite countless anecdotes and the historical significance of insight as a problem solving mechanism, its nature has long remained elusive. The conscious experience of insight is notoriously difficult to trace in non-verbal animals. Although studying insight has presented a significant challenge even to neurobiology and psychology, human neuroimaging studies have cleared the theoretical landscape, as they have begun to reveal the underlying mechanisms. The study of insight in non-human animals has, in contrast, remained limited to innovative adjustments to experimental designs (...)
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  • How Difficult Was It? Metacognitive Judgments About Problems and Their Solutions After the Aha Moment.Nadezhda V. Moroshkina, Alina I. Savina, Artur V. Ammalainen, Valeria A. Gershkovich, Ilia V. Zverev & Olga V. Lvova - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    The insight phenomenon is thought to comprise two components: cognitive and affective. The exact nature of the Aha! experience remains unclear; however, several explanations have been put forward. Based on the processing fluency account, the source of the Aha! experience is a sudden increase in processing fluency, associated with emerging of a solution. We hypothesized that in a situation which the Aha! experience accompanies the solution in, the problem would be judged as less difficult, regardless of the objective difficulty. We (...)
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  • Thinking style and psychosis proneness do not predict false insights.Hilary J. Grimmer, Ruben E. Laukkonen, Anna Freydenzon, William von Hippel & Jason M. Tangen - 2022 - Consciousness and Cognition 104 (C):103384.
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  • The illusion of insight: detailed warnings reduce but do not prevent false “Aha!” moments.Hilary J. Grimmer, Jason M. Tangen, Anna Freydenzon & Ruben E. Laukkonen - 2023 - Cognition and Emotion 37 (2):329-338.
    False “Aha!” moments can be elicited experimentally using the False Insight Anagram Task (FIAT), which combines semantic priming and visual similarity manipulations to lead participants into having “Aha!” moments for incorrect anagram solutions. In a preregistered experiment (N = 255), we tested whether warning participants and explaining to them exactly how they were being deceived, would reduce their susceptibility to false insights. We found that simple warnings did not reduce the incidence of false insights. On the other hand, participants who (...)
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