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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 Commentaires 0 Parts 130 Vue 0 Aperçu
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How to increase customer engagement?How to Increase Customer Engagement The Illusion of Attention in a Crowded World A company launches a perfectly designed product. The interface is clean. The pricing is competitive. The value proposition is clear. Users sign up. And then… they leave. Not in protest. Not in anger. Simply absence. The analytics dashboard tells a familiar story: initial interest, followed by silence....0 Commentaires 0 Parts 371 Vue 0 Aperçu
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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 Commentaires 0 Parts 123 Vue 0 Aperçu
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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 Commentaires 0 Parts 833 Vue 0 Aperçu
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What are examples of behavioral economics?What Are Examples of Behavioral Economics? The Strange Predictability of Human “Mistakes” A hospital cafeteria quietly rearranges its food display. Nothing is removed. Nothing is added. Only the order changes. A few weeks later, salad sales rise. Soda purchases fall. Dessert consumption declines. No prices were altered. No nutritional lectures were delivered. No penalties...0 Commentaires 0 Parts 561 Vue 0 Aperçu
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What did behavioral economists discover?What Did Behavioral Economists Discover? The Quiet Collapse of a Perfect Model For much of the twentieth century, economics was built on an elegant assumption: humans behave like rational agents. They gather information, process it consistently, and choose the option that maximizes utility. The model was not meant to describe people perfectly. It was meant to simplify reality. And for a...0 Commentaires 0 Parts 533 Vue 0 Aperçu
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What does confirmation bias do?What Does Confirmation Bias Do? The Quiet Reshaping of What We Think We Know A person reads a report about a controversial topic. Halfway through, they already feel certain about what it will conclude. As they continue reading, they notice details that support their view. Contradictory points feel less convincing, even when they are clearly stated. By the end, they feel more confident in...0 Commentaires 0 Parts 72 Vue 0 Aperçu
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What is an example of a cognitive bias?What Is an Example of a Cognitive Bias? A Simple Question With a Non-Simple Answer A person is asked whether more words in English begin with the letter “K” or have “K” as the third letter. Most people choose the first option. It feels correct. Immediate. Intuitive. But it is wrong. In reality, far more English words contain “K” in the third position...0 Commentaires 0 Parts 716 Vue 0 Aperçu
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What is anchoring bias?What Is Anchoring Bias? The First Number That Quietly Shapes Everything After A person is asked whether the population of a city is more or less than 5 million. Then they are asked to estimate the actual population. Most answers cluster around that initial figure, even when it is clearly arbitrary. If the first number had been 20 million instead, estimates would shift upward. Nothing...0 Commentaires 0 Parts 70 Vue 0 Aperçu
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