Exploration of Confirmation Bias and Its Effects on Financial and Marketing Decisions
Keywords:
Confirmation Bias, Investor Behavior, Consumer Psychology, Decision-Making Interventions, Information EcosystemAbstract
In a globalized, information-rich era, individuals’ investment and consumption decisions are increasingly shaped by psychological and social factors. Confirmation bias, a pervasive cognitive distortion, causes individuals to favor information that supports their beliefs while ignoring contradictory evidence, thus influencing both judgment and behavior. This paper reviews the cognitive foundations and evolution of confirmation bias, examining its effects in financial decisions and advertising. Individually, it drives selective processing and emotional reinforcement, causing overconfidence, overtrading, and irrational behavior. At the group and market levels, social learning and algorithmic amplification intensify herd behavior and price volatility. In advertising, marketers leverage confirmation bias through message consistency, targeting, and contextual cues to influence consumer attitudes and memory. The results demonstrate that to mitigate these effects, individuals should broaden information sources and critical thinking; organizations should use structured analysis, build diverse teams, and foster critical evaluation; society should promote media literacy, policy regulation, and tech-based fact-checking. By integrating these strategies, confirmation bias can be better managed, improving investor behavior, consumer decisions, and information ecosystem governance.