Overconfidence Effect
A cognitive bias where a person's subjective confidence in their judgments is greater than their objective accuracy.
A cognitive bias where a person's subjective confidence in their judgments is greater than their objective accuracy.
The tendency for people to prefer things that are easy to think about and understand.
A phenomenon where individuals' preferences between options change when the options are presented in different ways or contexts.
A high-level description of a system's structure and interactions, focusing on its market-facing aspects rather than technical details.
A model by Don Norman outlining the cognitive steps users take when interacting with a system: goal formation, planning, specifying, performing, perceiving, interpreting, and comparing.
An automated program used by search engines to browse the internet and index web pages, aiding in the retrieval of relevant information during a search query.
A phenomenon where learning is improved when study sessions are spaced out over time rather than crammed together.
The observed tendency of humans to quickly return to a relatively stable level of happiness despite major positive or negative events or life changes.
The tendency for individuals to give positive responses or feedback out of politeness, regardless of their true feelings.