User:Mati Roy/Books/Cognitive Biases: Too Much Information

Part 1

 * We notice things that are already primed in memory or repeated often.
 * Availability heuristic
 * Attentional bias
 * Illusory truth effect
 * Mere-exposure effect
 * Cue-dependent forgetting
 * Empathy gap
 * Omission bias
 * Base rate fallacy


 * Bizarre/funny/visually-striking/anthropomorphic things stick out more than non-bizarre/unfunny things.
 * Bizarreness effect
 * Von Restorff effect
 * Picture superiority effect
 * Self-reference effect
 * Negativity bias


 * We notice when something has changed.
 * Anchoring
 * Money illusion
 * Framing effect (psychology)
 * Weber–Fechner law
 * Conservatism (belief revision)
 * Distinction bias


 * We are drawn to details that confirm our own existing beliefs.
 * Confirmation bias
 * Congruence bias
 * Choice-supportive bias
 * Selective perception
 * Observer-expectancy effect
 * Ostrich effect
 * Subjective validation
 * Semmelweis reflex


 * We notice flaws in others more easily than flaws in ourselves.
 * Bias blind spot
 * Naïve cynicism
 * Naïve realism (psychology)