# Anchored and Propagated Updating Within Pseudoscientific Belief Systems

**Authors:** Josue García‐Arch, Marc Ballestero‐Arnau, Itxaso Barbería, Javier Rodríguez‐Ferreiro

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/nyas.70229 · Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences · 2026-03-03

## TL;DR

This study explores how pseudoscientific beliefs are updated through social feedback, revealing a mechanism that balances new information with initial convictions.

## Contribution

The study introduces an anchored propagation model to explain how pseudoscientific beliefs are updated while remaining resistant to change.

## Key findings

- Participants showed reduced prediction errors over time, indicating iterative belief updating.
- Anchored propagation best explained learning, where feedback spreads across beliefs but is stabilized by initial convictions.
- Belief updates depend on the alignment between prior expectations and normative feedback.

## Abstract

Pseudoscientific beliefs exert a profound influence on health behaviors, political decisions, and public trust in science, yet research has primarily identified correlates of pseudoscience acceptance rather than the mechanisms by which such beliefs form and update. In this study, we leveraged computational modeling to investigate how normative social feedback shapes pseudoscientific belief revision. A total of 300 US nationally representative participants conducted a learning task where they rated a set of 20 validated pseudoscientific statements while receiving trial‐by‐trial feedback. Behaviorally, participants showed systematic reductions in prediction errors across trials, consistent with iterative belief updating. Computational model comparison using hierarchical Bayesian inference revealed that learning was best captured by an anchored propagation model, in which prediction errors spread across correlated beliefs but were stabilized by an anchoring parameter reflecting initial convictions. Exploratory analyses further showed that belief updating depended on the alignment between prior expectations and normative feedback, amplifying congruent information and dampening incongruent inputs. These findings provide the first mechanistic account of how pseudoscientific beliefs are simultaneously receptive to new information and resistant to change, offering an integrative framework with implications for research in belief updating, social cognition, and interventions to reduce misinformation.

Belief revision in pseudoscience reflects structured interactions between prior convictions and social information. Using a U.S. representative sample and computational modeling, we found that the effects of normative feedback spread across correlated beliefs but remain constrained by anchoring to initial views. This anchored propagation mechanism explains how misinformation endures and suggests that targeted interventions can leverage the network structure of beliefs to promote broader conceptual change.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** physical and psychological maladies (MESH:D000067073), maladies (MESH:C535802)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

47 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12955757/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12955757