124533 Access

: The study found that simply hearing a claim multiple times makes people believe that a wider consensus exists for that claim, even if they only heard it from a single source.

: This "illusory consensus" helps explain how misinformation spreads; repetition alone can make an idea feel like "common knowledge," leading individuals to overestimate how much of the population actually agrees with it. Other Technical References 124533

Which of these specific areas—, Social Psychology , or Economic Policy — : The study found that simply hearing a

: The researchers propose a framework that combines Chaos Theory (to identify and reconstruct the hidden structure of the data) with Deep Learning models like LSTMs or Transformers. The number appears to refer to several distinct

The number appears to refer to several distinct academic and technical documents. To provide the most helpful informative paper, I have summarized the two most prominent topics associated with this identifier: Time Series Forecasting using Chaos Theory and the "Illusory Consensus Effect" in psychology.

Another major study under this identifier, "An Illusory Consensus Effect: The Mere Repetition of Information Increases Perceptions of Consensus," was published in Collabra: Psychology (Article 124533 ).

: This research examines how people judge how many others believe a certain fact.