narrow framing bias
a focus on the short term or only on parts of a situation
ostrich effect
avoiding potential bad news or negative interpretations
just world hypothesis
faith that justice and fairness will always prevail, eventually
social norms bias
an inclination to do a s others are doing
bias blind spot
a greater ease in seeing biases in others than ourselves
status quo bias
a preference for avoiding action or using the default option
barnum effect
making coherent stories up with vague or minimal information
attribute substitution
using a simple view instead of dealing with complexity
availability bias
using what most easily comes to mind to in judgements and decisions
belief bias
using a belief to avoid completing a reasoning process
confirmation bias
rationalizing support for conclusions that support your view
present bias
immediate benefits and short term interests are more attractive than long term ones
dunning/kruger effect
the more one knows the less confident one becomes and vice versa
priming bias
the exposure to a stimulus affects the responses to a subsequent situation
mere exposure effect
exposure and repetition will increase belief and acceptance
incentive effect
small rewards can have disproportionate impacts of behaviour
a focus on the short term or only on parts of a situation
ostrich effect
avoiding potential bad news or negative interpretations
just world hypothesis
faith that justice and fairness will always prevail, eventually
social norms bias
an inclination to do a s others are doing
bias blind spot
a greater ease in seeing biases in others than ourselves
status quo bias
a preference for avoiding action or using the default option
barnum effect
making coherent stories up with vague or minimal information
attribute substitution
using a simple view instead of dealing with complexity
availability bias
using what most easily comes to mind to in judgements and decisions
belief bias
using a belief to avoid completing a reasoning process
confirmation bias
rationalizing support for conclusions that support your view
present bias
immediate benefits and short term interests are more attractive than long term ones
dunning/kruger effect
the more one knows the less confident one becomes and vice versa
priming bias
the exposure to a stimulus affects the responses to a subsequent situation
mere exposure effect
exposure and repetition will increase belief and acceptance
incentive effect
small rewards can have disproportionate impacts of behaviour