Normalcy Bias: we underestimate things that might come, sometimes we don’t even believe they are going to come. For example, think of a car accident or a natural disaster.
Zero Sum Bias: thinking that if one thing goes up that another will go down.
Survivorship Bias: looking only at the successful subset in a larger group in which many have failed.
Subadditivity Effect: judging the probability of a whole as less than the probability of separate parts.
Denomination Effect: we are less likely to spend money if it is large bill money, we are more likely to spend lots of change of the same value.
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The more one seeks to rise into height and light, the more vigorously do ones roots struggle earthward, downward, into the dark, the deep — into evil.
A cognitive bias is a systematic error in thinking that occurs when people are processing and interpreting information in the world around them and affects the decisions and judgments that they make. Can be used in Marketing ...
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