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How do biases affect judgment?How Do Biases Affect Judgment? The Invisible Shaping of What Feels True A manager evaluates two job candidates. Both have similar qualifications. One is interviewed first and makes a strong initial impression. The second performs slightly better on paper but feels less memorable. The final decision favors the first candidate. From the outside, the reasoning may appear straightforward....0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 245 Visualizações 0 Anterior
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How do cognitive biases affect decision-making?How Do Cognitive Biases Affect Decision-Making? The Quiet Distortion Beneath Every Choice A manager selects a candidate. An investor commits capital. A patient agrees to a treatment. Each decision feels deliberate, reasoned, and grounded in evidence. Yet beneath this surface of deliberation, a quieter process is often at work. Cognitive biases shape what is noticed, how it is...0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 269 Visualizações 0 Anterior
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How do cognitive biases affect investing?How Do Cognitive Biases Affect Investing? Investing as a Psychological Process Investing is often described as a rational activity. In theory, it involves: Analyzing data Estimating future value Managing risk Making optimal allocations In practice, investing is also a psychological process. It involves interpreting uncertainty, reacting to changing prices, and...0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 252 Visualizações 0 Anterior
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How do companies influence buying behavior?How Do Companies Influence Buying Behavior? The Quiet Engineering of Choice A person opens an app intending to buy a single item. They scroll. They hesitate. They compare. And then, almost without noticing, they purchase something else entirely. Nothing forced the decision. No explicit coercion was present. The consumer still feels in control. Yet the outcome has been...0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 1KB Visualizações 0 Anterior
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How does pricing psychology work?How Does Pricing Psychology Work? The Strange Distance Between Price and Value A customer stands in front of two identical bottles of olive oil. One is priced at $9.99. The other at $14.99. Nothing else differs. Same shelf. Same brand. Same quantity. Yet the customer hesitates. Then chooses the more expensive bottle. When asked why, they offer a familiar explanation: it “seems...0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 780 Visualizações 0 Anterior
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How does psychology influence spending?How Does Psychology Influence Spending? The Invisible Hand Inside the Wallet A person walks into a store intending to buy a single item. They leave with three bags. Nothing about their income changed in that moment. Nothing about prices fundamentally shifted. The list they carried in was clear. What changed was not the budget. It was the mind navigating that budget under real-world...0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 873 Visualizações 0 Anterior
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How many cognitive biases are there?How Many Cognitive Biases Are There? The Question That Sounds Precise but Isn’t A student of decision-making opens a list of cognitive biases. Availability bias. Anchoring. Confirmation bias. Loss aversion. Framing. Overconfidence. The list continues. Then expands. Then branches. At some point, the question naturally arises: how many cognitive biases are there? It feels like a...0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 920 Visualizações 0 Anterior
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What are cognitive biases?What Are Cognitive Biases? The Invisible Patterns Behind Everyday Thinking A doctor reviews a patient's symptoms. An investor studies market data. A voter reads the latest headline. A manager evaluates a job candidate. All believe they are seeing reality as it is. And most of the time, they are wrong—not because they lack intelligence, expertise, or effort, but because the mind...0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 197 Visualizações 0 Anterior
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What are cognitive biases?What Are Cognitive Biases? The Quiet Distortions Inside Clear Thinking A person is asked a simple question: “Which is more likely: a dramatic event, or a dramatic event explained in detail?” Most people choose the second option. It feels more plausible. More complete. More “real.” But logically, this cannot be correct. Adding detail cannot increase probability....0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 876 Visualizações 0 Anterior
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