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  2. List of cognitive biases - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cognitive_biases

    For example, for certain types of questions, answers that people rate as "99% certain" turn out to be wrong 40% of the time. [ 5 ] [ 44 ] [ 45 ] [ 46 ] Planning fallacy , the tendency for people to underestimate the time it will take them to complete a given task.

  3. Apophenia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apophenia

    Apophenia (/ æ p oʊ ˈ f iː n i ə /) is the tendency to perceive meaningful connections between unrelated things. [1]The term (German: Apophänie from the Greek verb: ἀποφαίνειν, romanized: apophaínein) was coined by psychiatrist Klaus Conrad in his 1958 publication on the beginning stages of schizophrenia. [2]

  4. Illusory truth effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illusory_truth_effect

    In a 2015 study, researchers discovered that familiarity can overpower rationality and that repetitively hearing that a certain statement is wrong can paradoxically cause it to feel right. [4] Researchers observed the illusory truth effect's impact even on participants who knew the correct answer to begin with but were persuaded to believe ...

  5. The science behind why people think they're right when they ...

    www.aol.com/science-behind-why-people-think...

    “It’s not just that people are wrong. It’s that they are so confident in their wrongness that is the problem,” Schwartz said. The antidote, he added, is “being curious and being humble.”

  6. False consensus effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/False_consensus_effect

    One recent study has shown that consensus bias may improve decisions about other people's preferences. [4] Ross, Green and House first defined the false consensus effect in 1977 with emphasis on the relative commonness that people perceive about their own responses; however, similar projection phenomena had already caught attention in psychology.

  7. Confirmation bias - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Confirmation_bias

    illusory correlation (when people falsely perceive an association between two events or situations). A series of psychological experiments in the 1960s suggested that people are biased toward confirming their existing beliefs. Later work re-interpreted these results as a tendency to test ideas in a one-sided way, focusing on one possibility and ...

  8. Image credits: Candid-Mine5119 We’ve all been there—making mistakes because we were trying something for the first time, didn’t have all the information, or maybe just had an off day.

  9. Frequency illusion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frequency_illusion

    [5] [6] [7] This means that people have the unconscious cognitive ability to filter for what they are focusing on. Selective attention is always at play whenever frequency illusion occurs. [2] Since selective attention directs focus to the information they are searching for, their experience of frequency illusion will also focus on the same ...