Peltzman Effect
The hypothesis that safety measures may lead to behavioral changes that offset the benefits of the measures, potentially leading to risk compensation.
The hypothesis that safety measures may lead to behavioral changes that offset the benefits of the measures, potentially leading to risk compensation.
A cognitive phenomenon where people are more likely to pursue goals or change behavior following a temporal landmark (e.g., new year, birthday).
A software development practice where code changes are automatically deployed to production without manual intervention.
Behavioral Science (BeSci) is the study of human behavior through systematic analysis and investigation.
The study of the principles that govern human behavior, including how people respond to stimuli and learn from their environment.
A concept describing how motivation fluctuates over time, influenced by various factors such as goals, rewards, and external circumstances.
A cognitive bias where individuals overestimate their ability to control impulsive behavior, leading to overexposure to temptations.
Representativeness is a heuristic in decision-making where individuals judge the probability of an event based on how much it resembles a typical case.
A systematic process for determining and addressing needs or gaps between current conditions and desired outcomes.