BBC World Service | Why rival football fans can see the same game differently - Whose Truth? BBC World Service @BBCWorldService | Uploaded June 2024 | Updated October 2024, 7 hours ago.
Arsenal v Newcastle United... Liverpool v Nottingham Forest... How can rival football fans watch the same foul, or goal, and see it completely differently?
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Two neuroscientists reveal how confirmation bias and group bias shape our reality. Dr Itiel Dror explains how our experiences and expectations impact our perception. And Prof Tim Andrews, University of York, reveals what happened when a group of Manchester United and Chelsea fans had their brains scanned while watching games between the two sides.
Our unconscious biases can be amplified by social media, particularly when platforms offer us connections and content based on our groups. According to Nobel Prize laureate Maria Ressa, this can lead to 'tribalism'. So is there a way to override them?
With thanks to Prof Dr Emilie Caspar from the Moral and Social Brain lab at Ghent University, Belgium.
This content was created as a co-production between Nobel Prize Outreach and the BBC. Watch more videos in the playlist ππ½ youtube.com/playlist?list=PLz_B0PFGIn4fMs1zgiPFVJc1U_2L_JB9_
00:00 Introduction
00:14 Newcastle one, Arsenal nil - the fan view
00:40 Confirmation bias
02:17 Group bias
02:29 Liverpool v Nottingham Forest - the fan view
03:19 Chelsea and ManchesterΒ United football fans brain scan study
03:50 The results
04:10 "Tribalism" and social media
05:15 Can we override our cognitive biases?
Further information:
Neural Correlates of Group Bias During Natural Viewing: academic.oup.com/cercor/article/29/8/3380/5112933?guestAccessKey=7a1ead2c-f4c0-44fd-9544-bb2c5e4049ba
Cognitive and Human Factors in Expert Decision Making: Six Fallacies and the Eight Sources of Bias: pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.analchem.0c00704
Linear Sequential UnmaskingβExpanded (LSU-E): A general approach for improving decision making as well as minimizing noise and bias: sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589871X21000310?via%3Dihub
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Arsenal v Newcastle United... Liverpool v Nottingham Forest... How can rival football fans watch the same foul, or goal, and see it completely differently?
Click here to subscribe to our channel ππ½ bbc.in/3VyyriM
Two neuroscientists reveal how confirmation bias and group bias shape our reality. Dr Itiel Dror explains how our experiences and expectations impact our perception. And Prof Tim Andrews, University of York, reveals what happened when a group of Manchester United and Chelsea fans had their brains scanned while watching games between the two sides.
Our unconscious biases can be amplified by social media, particularly when platforms offer us connections and content based on our groups. According to Nobel Prize laureate Maria Ressa, this can lead to 'tribalism'. So is there a way to override them?
With thanks to Prof Dr Emilie Caspar from the Moral and Social Brain lab at Ghent University, Belgium.
This content was created as a co-production between Nobel Prize Outreach and the BBC. Watch more videos in the playlist ππ½ youtube.com/playlist?list=PLz_B0PFGIn4fMs1zgiPFVJc1U_2L_JB9_
00:00 Introduction
00:14 Newcastle one, Arsenal nil - the fan view
00:40 Confirmation bias
02:17 Group bias
02:29 Liverpool v Nottingham Forest - the fan view
03:19 Chelsea and ManchesterΒ United football fans brain scan study
03:50 The results
04:10 "Tribalism" and social media
05:15 Can we override our cognitive biases?
Further information:
Neural Correlates of Group Bias During Natural Viewing: academic.oup.com/cercor/article/29/8/3380/5112933?guestAccessKey=7a1ead2c-f4c0-44fd-9544-bb2c5e4049ba
Cognitive and Human Factors in Expert Decision Making: Six Fallacies and the Eight Sources of Bias: pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.analchem.0c00704
Linear Sequential UnmaskingβExpanded (LSU-E): A general approach for improving decision making as well as minimizing noise and bias: sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589871X21000310?via%3Dihub
----------------
This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel.
If you like what we do, you can also find us here:
Instagram ππ½ instagram.com/bbcworldservice
Twitter ππ½ twitter.com/bbcworldservice
Facebook ππ½ facebook.com/bbcworldservice
BBC World Service website ππ½ bbc.co.uk/worldserviceradio
Thanks for watching and subscribing!
#BBCWorldService #worldservice #football #neuroscience