Rhyme-as-reason effect

The rhyme-as-reason effect, sometimes erroneously known as the Eaton–Rosen phenomenon, is a cognitive bias where sayings or aphorisms are perceived as more accurate or truthful when they rhyme. In experiments, participants evaluated variations of sayings that either rhymed or did not rhyme.

Source: Wikipedia — Rhyme-as-reason effect (CC BY-SA 4.0)

Rhyme-as-reason effect

The rhyme-as-reason effect, sometimes erroneously known as the Eaton–Rosen phenomenon, is a cognitive bias where sayings or aphorisms are perceived as more accurate or truthful when they rhyme. In experiments, participants evaluated variations of sayings that either rhymed or did not rhyme.

This neuron ends here.

Source: Wikipedia "Rhyme-as-reason effect" · CC BY-SA 4.0

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