HomeMarkets Markets Does repeated information trick us into thinking we knew it all along? New study has an answer By news May 16, 2024 0 215 FacebookTwitterPinterestWhatsApp New research published in Cognition reveals that repeated exposure not only makes people more likely to believe information is true but also falsely …This post was originally published on this site Share FacebookTwitterPinterestWhatsApp Subscribe Login Notify of new follow-up comments new replies to my comments Please login to comment 0 Comments Inline Feedbacks View all comments Stay Connected149,232FansLike396,312FollowersFollow2,670SubscribersSubscribe Latest Articles Markets Beige Book and Portfolio Reviews (4/15/2026) Markets The Multiverse Owes Us Money: Quantum Computing and the Hidden Cost of Free Arbitrage Markets Thrill-Ride Thursday – S&P Back to Record Highs on Peace Hopes (suckers?) Market News Done and Dusted? Trump’s Portrayal of the War in Iran Collides With Reality. Energy Zeihan: The Blockade of Iran Begins Energy Iran’s military forces combine state‑of‑the‑art drones and hackers with out‑of‑date conventional weapons Top Trades PhilStockWorld Top Trade Alert – April 15th, 2026 – Cleveland Cliffs, Inc. (CLF) Markets Beige Book Wednesday – Assessing the War Damage to the Economy Energy 4 ways the war in Iran has weakened the United States in the great power game Market News Strait of Hormuz: Why the US and Iran are sailing in very different legal waters Energy Iran Controls the Strait → The U.S. May Flip the Global System Energy The Islamabad talks were doomed to failure – and Hormuz blockade has thrown another obstacle to any Iran‑US deal Energy What a ‘Blockade’ in the Strait of Hormuz Really Means Market News Immigrants Are Scared to File Taxes. It Could Cost the U.S. Billions. Load more