Sources of Pluralistic Ignorance: A Scoping Review and Tripartite Framework for Causes of Shared Social Misperceptions
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Interpersonal, societal, and political interaction is aided by accurately understanding how other people think and feel. Yet, research demonstrates broadly shared misperceptions of others’ thoughts, feelings, and actions in a variety of contexts—a phenomenon known as pluralistic ignorance. Despite a century of research and theory on pluralistic ignorance, limited work systematically considers possible drivers of these patterns of misperceptions, leaving us with a poor understanding of how to address the phenomenon. In the present work, we draw on theories from psychology and related social science disciplines to construct a systematic framework of the potential causes of pluralistic ignorance. Our framework proposes that pluralistic ignorance can emerge from three broad categories of psychological and contextual factors: a) information availability, b) heuristics, and c) directionally motivated reasoning. In each section, we discuss research and theory supporting possible explanations for pluralistic ignorance and promising directions for corrective interventions.