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Articles Tagged: Cognitive Psychology

Articles

  • Anchoring Bias - Anchoring bias is a cognitive tendency to rely too heavily on the first piece of information encountered, using it as a reference point that influences subsequent judgments.
  • Attribution Theory - Explore how individuals interpret and explain the causes of behavior and events, shaping our understanding, emotions, and actions.
  • Attributional Style - Attributional style is an individual's consistent way of explaining the causes of events, significantly impacting emotions, motivation, and behavior.
  • Availability Heuristic - A cognitive bias where easily recalled information is overestimated in importance or likelihood.
  • Bandwagon Effect - The bandwagon effect is a psychological phenomenon where individuals adopt certain behaviors, beliefs, or attitudes simply because others are doing so, often driven by a desire to belong.
  • Base Rate Neglect - A cognitive bias where individuals overlook general statistical information in favor of specific, vivid details when making probability judgments.
  • Cognitive Dissonance - The psychological tension and discomfort experienced when holding conflicting beliefs, attitudes, or behaviors, and the drive to reduce this inconsistency.
  • Commitment and Consistency - A deep-seated psychological principle driving individuals to align their actions and beliefs with their past commitments to maintain a stable self-image.
  • Compromise Effect - A cognitive bias where individuals tend to choose a middle option in a set of choices, often influenced by avoiding extremes.
  • Confirmation Bias - A pervasive cognitive tendency where individuals actively seek, interpret, favor, and recall information that confirms their existing beliefs or values.
  • Decoy Effect (Asymmetric Dominance) - Understand how introducing a strategically inferior option can manipulate choices and make another option appear more appealing.
  • Effort Justification - The psychological tendency to value outcomes more highly when significant effort has been invested in achieving them.
  • Endowment Effect - The endowment effect is a cognitive bias where people value items they own more highly than identical items they do not own, leading to a reluctance to sell.
  • Ensemble Averaging - A powerful statistical technique combining multiple individual outputs to achieve more robust and accurate results, with applications in perception, decision-making, and machine learning.
  • Flow State - A psychological state of complete immersion and energized focus in an activity, leading to enjoyment and optimal performance.
  • Framing Effect - Discover how the way information is presented, rather than its objective content, profoundly influences our decisions and perceptions.
  • Fundamental Attribution Error - Discover the Fundamental Attribution Error, a cognitive bias that leads us to overemphasize personality when explaining others' behavior while ignoring crucial situational factors.
  • Gambler's Fallacy - The Gambler's Fallacy is a cognitive bias where individuals mistakenly believe that past outcomes of independent random events influence future outcomes.
  • Hyperbolic Discounting - Hyperbolic discounting describes our tendency to prefer immediate rewards over larger, delayed rewards, even when the delayed reward is objectively more valuable.
  • Information Overload - A pervasive phenomenon where the volume of data exceeds an individual's capacity to process it, leading to confusion, anxiety, and reduced productivity.
  • Myopic Loss Aversion - The tendency to be overly sensitive to losses when outcomes are evaluated frequently, leading to short-sighted decision-making.
  • Placebo Effect - A phenomenon where inert treatments elicit real physiological and psychological improvements due to a patient's belief and expectation, highlighting the profound mind-body connection.
  • Planning Fallacy - The planning fallacy is our pervasive tendency to underestimate the time, costs, and risks of future tasks while overestimating their benefits, a bias that affects individuals and organizations alike.
  • Priming Effect - The priming effect is a cognitive phenomenon where exposure to one stimulus subtly influences an individual's response to a subsequent stimulus, often without conscious awareness.
  • Regression to the Mean - Understand the statistical phenomenon where extreme outcomes tend to move closer to the average upon subsequent measurements, influencing everything from sports performance to investment returns.
  • Schema Theory - Schema theory explains how our minds use organized mental frameworks (schemas) to efficiently process, interpret, and remember information, shaping our understanding of the world.
  • Self-Efficacy - An individual's belief in their capacity to execute behaviors necessary to produce specific performance outcomes, influencing motivation, behavior, and well-being.
  • Self-Perception Theory - A social psychological theory proposing that individuals infer their own attitudes, beliefs, and emotions by observing their own behaviors and the circumstances surrounding them.
  • Social Comparison Theory - An exploration of how individuals evaluate their opinions, abilities, and social standing by comparing themselves to others, and the profound impact this has on our psychology and behavior.
  • Social Proof - Social proof is a psychological phenomenon where individuals look to the actions and opinions of others to guide their own behavior, especially in uncertain situations.
  • Status Quo Bias - The tendency for individuals to prefer the current state of affairs over change, even when change may be beneficial.
  • Sunk Cost Fallacy - Understand the psychological trap of continuing an endeavor due to past investments, even when it's no longer beneficial, and learn how to avoid it.
  • The Backfire Effect - An exploration of the cognitive bias where individuals strengthen their existing beliefs when confronted with contradictory evidence.
  • The Barnum Effect - Discover the Barnum Effect, a common cognitive bias where people readily accept vague, general personality descriptions as uniquely tailored to them.
  • The IKEA Effect - When Labor Leads to Love - The cognitive bias where we overvalue products we help create, explaining our attachment to DIY projects and customized goods.