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Flow chart of cognitive biases

breakdown-notes.com

360 points by cher14 8 years ago · 29 comments

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arthursilva 8 years ago

Related https://betterhumans.coach.me/cognitive-bias-cheat-sheet-55a...

  • fjsolwmv 8 years ago

    Much better than OP

    • tonystubblebine 8 years ago

      I'm so glad that link got posted. That's my Medium publication, but the author, Buster Benson, has been doing amazing work in the space.

      A lot of that work turned toward arguing effectively and I think that's an important topic in our divisive times.

      Buster has a Patreon for the development of the book that is really good (he's very active and responsive): https://www.patreon.com/busterbenson

vanni 8 years ago

COGNITIVE BIAS CODEX + definitions (9MB):

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/ce/Cognitiv...

725686 8 years ago

The decision points have bad names. How can "When it was exaclty?" or "how satisfying it was ?" have a "yes" "no" answer?

  • otherdave 8 years ago

    I thought it was asking "are you trying to determine 'When it was exactly?' and 'Are you trying to remember how satisfying it was?'" which made sense.

    • fjsolwmv 8 years ago

      That's not it. It's just garbled. "availability heuristic" means that recent or related-to-current-situation events are easier to remember than other, so they bias your mental estimate of "average" or "sum".

      • derefr 8 years ago

        No, the GP has the right idea. The availability heuristic also causes emotionally-potent events to seem more recent than they were, because they're "available." Because recent events are easier to remember, our brains assume incorrectly that easier-to-remember events must be more recent. When, really, there are other reasons an event can be easier to remember.

        This is the logic behind the "climate of fear" the media creates—every time a tragedy is made into a huge news story, it becomes semi-permanently available as an exemplar to your brain of that kind of thing happening; and then, when you try to figure out when the last time that kind of thing happened was (which is, in turn, a heuristic people tend to use for how often something happens) the highly-available exemplar in your mind makes you still feel like it "just happened" even if it was years ago.

        (Or, to put that another way: everyone in America who was alive when 9/11 happened, still thinks of terrorist attacks against the US as happening far more often than they do; everyone in America who was born after 9/11 has a better-calibrated estimate. The scope of the tragedy—and especially of the reporting of the tragedy—caused it to be "too available" to people, permanently biasing their time-scale and frequency estimates.)

gonzo41 8 years ago

This is really good, you should make a mobile version so I can use this to gaslight my coworkers. :p

  • mar77i 8 years ago

    That reminds me of the cognitive bias of trusting a behavioral flowchart from a stranger on the internet. Or the cognitive bias of having to weaponize everything that's even marginally psychological. But hey, I'm not here to develop on all these contradictions.

  • Can_Not 8 years ago

    I'm already gaslit just trying to use it on mobile, but yeah it looks good.

thisisit 8 years ago

Is there a way to print this out?

zuzuleinen 8 years ago

For those interested, I built small project https://dailycognitivebias.com which basically send you every day a random cognitive bias to your inbox.

dmtroyer 8 years ago

It is unfortunate that the URL that loads after following the link does not actually direct to this particular flowchart. Makes sharing difficult.

padobson 8 years ago

I can't help but wonder if the person that made this is biased towards finding bias.

raldu 8 years ago

Also check out:

http://coglode.com

ythn 8 years ago

Is it even possible to be completely unbiased?

satyajeet23 8 years ago

Related - https://yourbias.is

sizzle 8 years ago

Who wants to build an ML cognitive debiasing machine with me? I'm serious!

  • rofrol 8 years ago

    Tell me more

    • sizzle 8 years ago

      A machine learning system that can (1) parse real time human spoken language and reliably detect any hint of bias which can then (2) output an unbiased version of that input.

      Some use cases would be to deploy this in government (e.g. courts, police force etc) and for the betterment of humanity in making humans aware of their unconscious biases in decision that have far reaching consequences if left unchecked.

adriansky 8 years ago

Ads are annoying on mobile. Sigh

ccc111 8 years ago

these biases are what makes us "human"

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