There is a natural human tendency to assume that examples we can readily think of are more relevant than they truly are.
For example, if you’re looking for a new note-taking app, you might go for a particular tool because you recall that a friend recently raved about it. Or, if you read about a plane crash in the news a week before you are due to fly for work, you may overestimate the likelihood of your own plane crashing.
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Availability bias: the tendency to use information that easily comes to mind
nesslabs.com
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What's in our mind already is preferred.
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Similar ideas to Demonstrating Availability Bias
We tend to judge the likelihood and significance of things based on how easily they come to mind. The more “available” a piece of information is to us, the more important it seems.
The result is that we give greater weight to information we learned recently because a news...
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