Cognitive Bias

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List of cognitive biases - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A cognitive bias is a pattern of deviation in judgment that occurs in particular ... Cognitive biases are instances of evolved mental behavior. ...
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Cognitive bias - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A cognitive bias is a person's tendency to make errors in judgment based on ... Forms of cognitive bias include errors in statistical judgment, social ...
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A: Cognitive biases affecting judgment of existential risks
Cognitive biases potentially affecting judgment of global risks ... biases. program in cognitive psychology. This program has made discoveries highly ...
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List of cognitive biases
Cognitive bias is distortion in the way we perceive reality. ... It uses material from the article List of cognitive biases at Wikipedia.org. ...
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What is a Cognitive Bias?
Brief and Straightforward Guide: What is a Cognitive Bias? ... A cognitive bias is a flaw in judgment which is caused by memory, social ...
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Cognitive bias - Psychology Wiki
A cognitive bias is any of a wide range of observer effects identified in ... The original article was at Cognitive bias. The list of authors can be seen in ...
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[F08] Cognitive biases
Cognitive biases are certain pervasive thinking habits ... cognitive biases ... Many cognitive biases are related to judgments and reasoning about ...
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Cognitive bias
A cognitive bias is any of a wide range of observer effects identified in ... It uses material from the article Cognitive bias at Wikipedia.org. ...
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A cognitive bias is any of a wide range of observer effects identified in cognitive science and social psychology including very basic Statistics, social attribution, and memory errors that are common to all human beings. Biases drastically skew the reliability of anecdotal evidence and Evidence (law).

Overview Bias arises from various life, loyalty and local risk and attention concerns that are difficult to separate or codify. Much of the present scientific understanding of biases stems from the work of Amos Tversky and Daniel Kahneman and their colleagues, whose experiments demonstrated distinct and replicable ways in which human judgment and decision-making differ from rational choice theory. This led to Tversky and Kahneman developing prospect theory as an alternative. Tversky and Kahneman claim that the biases they identified are at least partially the result of problem-solving using mental short-cuts or "heuristics", for instance using how readily or vividly something comes to mind as an indication of how often or how recently it was encountered (the availability heuristic). Other biases have been demonstrated in separate experiments, such as the Confirmation bias demonstrated by Peter C. Wason.

Some scientists have questioned whether all of the 'biases' are in fact errors. David Funder and Joachim Krueger have argued that some so called 'biases' may in fact be 'approximation shortcuts', which aid humans in making predictions when information is in short supply. For example, the false consensus effect may be viewed as a reasonable estimation based on a single known data point, your own opinion, instead of a false belief that other people agree with you.

Types of cognitive biases Biases can be distinguished on a number of dimensions. For example, there are biases specific to groups (such as the Risky shift) as well as biases at the individual level.

Some biases affect decision-making, where the desirability of options has to be considered (e.g. Sunk cost). Others such as Illusory correlation affect judgement of how likely something is, or of whether one thing is the cause of another. A distinctive class of biases affect memory (Schacter (1999)), such as consistency bias (remembering one's past attitudes and behaviour as more similar to one's present attitudes).

Some biases reflect a subject's motivation (Kunda (1990)), for example the desire for a positive self-image leading to Egocentric bias (Hoorens (1993)) and the avoidance of unpleasant cognitive dissonance. Other biases are due to the particular way the brain perceives, forms memories and makes judgements. This distinction is sometimes described as "Hot cognition" versus "Cold Cognition", as motivated cognition can involve a state of arousal.

Among the "cold" biases, some are due to ignoring relevant information (e.g. Neglect of probability), whereas some involve a decision or judgement being affected by irrelevant information (for example the Framing (social sciences) where the exact same problem receives different responses depending on how it is described) or giving excessive weight to an unimportant but salient feature of the problem (e.g. Anchoring).

The fact that some biases reflect motivation, and in particular the motivation to have positive attitudes to oneself (Hoorens (1993)) accounts for the fact that many biases are self-serving or self-directed (e.g. Illusion of asymmetric insight, Self-serving bias, Projection bias). There are also biases in how subjects evaluate in-groups or out-groups; evaluating in-groups as more diverse and "better" in many respects, even when those groups are arbitrarily-defined (Ingroup bias, Outgroup homogeneity bias).

The following is a list of the more commonly studied cognitive biases.



Practical Significance Many social institutions rely on individuals to make rational judgments . A fair jury trial, for example, requires that the jury ignore irrelevant features of the case (such as the attractiveness of the defendant), weigh the relevant features appropriately, consider different possibilities open-mindedly and resist fallacies such as appeal to emotion. The various biases demonstrated in these psychological experiments suggest that people will fail to do all these things. However, they fail to do so in systematic, directional ways that are predictable.

The latest advacement in decision mapping enables further empirical research on the influences of heuristics and bias on human decision making in contexts of risk and uncertainty. These techniques are presented by Facione and Facione in Thinking and Reasoning in Human Decision Making: The Method of Argument and Heuristic Analysis (The California Academic Press, 2007). This book describes the theory, technique, and application of this new analytical methodology. Among other things it shows how to construct decision maps from oral and textual expressions of individual or group decisions. A&H Method decision maps illustrate the combinination of reasons-claim argument strands as well as the influences of cognitive heuristics and psychological dominance structuring which emerge from those data. Researchers can compare decision maps illustrating how many different people have made a decision about the same question (e.g. "Should I have a doctor look at this troubling breast cancer symptom I've discovered." "Why did I ignore the evidence that the project was going over budget?") and then craft potential cognitive interventions aimed at improving decision making outcomes.

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External links



Cognitive bias - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For an article about the conceptual problems of the mind see Cognitive closure (philosophy)

List of cognitive biases - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A cognitive bias is a pattern of deviation in judgement that occurs in particular situations (see also cognitive distortion and the lists of thinking-related topics).

UnderstandingCognitiveBiasInDecisionMaking
This session was run DuncanPierce and RachelDavies. The session started with an overview from Duncan about what "cognitive bias" is. The original format for the session and ...

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SPA Conference session: Understanding Cognitive Bias in Decision-Making: One-line description: A workshop that explores how cognitive biases affect thinking

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Cognitive bias at SPA 2007 | Duncan Pierce
I ran the first cognitive bias workshop at SPA 2007 yesterday. It went reasonably well but as I expected it was difficult for participants to review and use the list of cognitive ...

Cognitive bias at SPA 2007 | Duncan Pierce
Poster outputs from Cognitive Bias workshop; Books and websites on Agile adoption; How can an application or language be agile? Sun SPOTs; April Fool - agile certification; How ...

Cognitive bias for alcohol-related information in inferential ...
Drug and Alcohol Dependence 66 (2002) 235-241 Cognitive bias for alcohol-related information in inferential processes EmmanuelM. Pothos a, *, W. Miles Cox b a Department of ...

Cognitive bias - Psychology Wiki
A cognitive bias is any of a wide range of observer effects identified in cognitive science and social psychology including very basic statistical, social attribution, and ... A ...

e-Prints Soton - Cognitive bias and drug craving in recreational ...
Recent theories propose that repeated drug use is associated with attentional and evaluative biases for drug-related stimuli, and that these cognitive biases are related to ...





 
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