Self-Persuasion: Evidence from Field Experiments at International Debating Competitions

Authors: Egon Tripodi, Peter Schwardmann, Joël van der Weele
Journal: American Economic Review (2022)
DOI: 10.1257/aer.20200372
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Abstract:
Laboratory evidence shows that when people have to argue for a given position, they persuade themselves about the position's factual and moral superiority. Such self-persuasion limits the potential of communication to resolve conflict and reduce polarization. We test for this phenomenon in a field setting, at international debating competitions that randomly assign experienced and motivated debaters to argue one side of a topical motion. We find self-persuasion in factual beliefs and confidence in one's position. Effect sizes are smaller than in the laboratory, but robust to a one-hour exchange of arguments and a ten-fold increase in incentives for accuracy.
Keywords:
Self-persuasion beliefs polarization field experiment debating motivated reasoning