“…On manipulated trials, using experimental subterfuge, participants receive false feedback about their choice. In the original work on choice blindness participants chose between pairs of faces which they preferred (P. Johansson et al, 2005), but the effect has since been both replicated (P. Luo & Yu, 2017;Sauerland et al, 2016;Taya et al, 2014) and extended to a variety of choice domains including moral (Hall et al, 2012;Vranka & Bahník, 2016) and political attitudes (Hall et al, 2013;Strandberg et al, 2020;Strandberg et al, 2018), financial decisions (McLaughlin & Somerville, 2013), risk preferences (Kusev et al, 2022), food and drink preferences (Cheung et al, 2016), eye-witness lineup decisions (Cochran et al, 2016;Sagana et al, 2014a), as well as, decisions made in groups (Pärnamets, von Zimmermann, et al, 2020). In these experiments, participants will accept an outcome opposite to their intended in between a third to a full eighty percent of trials.…”