0 Commenti
0 condivisioni
214 Views
0 Anteprima
Cerca
Scopri nuove persone e i loro amici a quattro zampe, e fai nuove amicizie
-
Effettua l'accesso per mettere mi piace, condividere e commentare!
-
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 Commenti 0 condivisioni 255 Views 0 Anteprima
-
How is behavioral economics different from traditional economics?How Is Behavioral Economics Different From Traditional Economics? The Question That Split Economics in Two Imagine two economists observing the same scene. A shopper enters a store intending to buy toothpaste. Ten minutes later, she leaves with scented candles, gourmet chocolate, and a kitchen gadget she had never considered purchasing before entering. The first economist shrugs. The...0 Commenti 0 condivisioni 142 Views 0 Anteprima
-
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 Commenti 0 condivisioni 211 Views 0 Anteprima
-
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 Commenti 0 condivisioni 212 Views 0 Anteprima
-
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 Commenti 0 condivisioni 141 Views 0 Anteprima
-
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 Commenti 0 condivisioni 105 Views 0 Anteprima
-
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 Commenti 0 condivisioni 218 Views 0 Anteprima
-
What is Behavioral Economics?What is Behavioral Economics? Behavioral economics is a field that blends insights from psychology with traditional economics to understand how people make decisions. Unlike classical economics, which assumes that individuals are perfectly rational and always act in their self-interest, behavioral economics recognizes that humans are often influenced by biases, emotions, and social factors....0 Commenti 0 condivisioni 5K Views 0 Anteprima
-
What is behavioral economics?What Is Behavioral Economics? The Discipline That Discovered How We Actually Decide The Mistake That Changed Economics Several years ago, I found myself standing in a grocery store, holding two bottles of wine. One cost $12. The other cost $24. I knew almost nothing about wine. Yet I lingered. I examined labels I did not understand, regions I could not locate on a map, and tasting notes...0 Commenti 0 condivisioni 147 Views 0 Anteprima
Pagine in Evidenza