Proportionality Bias
The tendency to believe that large or significant events must have large or significant causes.
The tendency to believe that large or significant events must have large or significant causes.
A cognitive bias where people overestimate the probability of success for difficult tasks and underestimate it for easy tasks.
The tendency to forget information that can be easily found online, also known as digital amnesia.
The tendency for individuals to favor information that aligns with their existing beliefs and to avoid information that contradicts them.
A social norm of responding to a positive action with another positive action, fostering mutual benefit and cooperation.
A mode of thinking, derived from Dual Process Theory, that is fast, automatic, and intuitive, often relying on heuristics and immediate impressions.
Knowledge Organization System (KOS) refers to a structured framework for organizing, managing, and retrieving information within a specific domain or across multiple domains.
A test proposed by Alan Turing to determine if a machine's behavior is indistinguishable from that of a human.
The process of identifying unusual patterns or outliers in data that do not conform to expected behavior.