Sunday, June 23, 2024

Bias

 In our complex world, it’s important to overcome a variety of biases and deepen the level of understanding.

In this vast world, each one of us has subjective perception, so each one of us also has certain biases, some have more, some have less. Bias refers to systematic errors in thinking or judgment that can affect perceptions and decision-making. These biases can influence how individuals interpret information, form beliefs, and make decisions. Here are several types of biases commonly observed in psychology and decision science:


Cognitive Biases: Cognition is our thinking ability to understand the world. Cognitive bias causes misjudgments and misunderstanding.

-Confirmation Bias: Tendency to search for, interpret, favor, and recall information that confirms one's preexisting beliefs or hypotheses while giving disproportionately less consideration to alternative possibilities.

-Anchoring Bias: Relying too heavily on the first piece of information encountered (the "anchor") when making decisions, even if the anchor is irrelevant to the decision at hand.

Hindsight Bias: Belief that past events were more predictable than they actually were before they occurred, often leading to an overestimation of one's ability to have foreseen the outcome.

-Bandwagon Effect: The tendency to do or believe things because many other people do or believe the same, regardless of the evidence or rationality.

-Egotistic Bias: Overestimating one's own abilities, knowledge, or judgment, leading to decisions that are more confident but not necessarily more accurate.


Social Judgmental Biases: The world become hyperdiverse, we can’t judge others without getting to know them deeply enough, in fact, empathy is one of the most professional qualities nowadays.

-Stereotyping: Generalizing beliefs about a group of people based on their membership in that group, often leading to inaccurate or unfair judgments.

-In-group Bias: Favoring members of one's own group (in-group) over those who are not members (out-group), even when there is no legitimate reason for the distinction.

-Attribution Bias: Tendency to attribute one's own successes to internal factors (skill, effort) and failures to external factors (luck, circumstances)

Halo Effect: Forming a favorable (or unfavorable) impression of a person based on a single positive (or negative) trait, leading to biased judgments across other traits or characteristics.

Decision-Making Biases:


Risk Aversion Bias: Preferring to avoid losses rather than acquire gains, even when the potential outcome is the same.

-Framing Effect: Decisions are influenced by how options are presented (as gains or losses) rather than the objective value of the options themselves.

-Escalation of Commitment: Continuing to invest resources (time, money, effort) into a failing course of action despite evidence that suggests it is not the best decision.

-Status Quo Bias: Preference for the current state of affairs, leading to resistance to change or reluctance to make decisions that deviate from the current situation.


In our complex world, it’s important to overcome the variety of biases, and deepen the level of understanding. These biases are pervasive in human cognition and can impact various aspects of daily life, including interpersonal relationships, decision-making, and perceptions of the world. Recognizing these biases is crucial in promoting critical thinking and making more informed and rational decisions.


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