Bypassing Pattern
A reading pattern where users skip over certain sections of content, often due to a lack of perceived relevance.
A reading pattern where users skip over certain sections of content, often due to a lack of perceived relevance.
A behavioral economic theory that describes how people choose between probabilistic alternatives that involve risk, where the probabilities of outcomes are known.
A cognitive bias where people disproportionately prefer smaller, immediate rewards over larger, later rewards.
The mistaken belief that a person who has experienced success in a random event has a higher probability of further success in additional attempts.
A cognitive bias where individuals interpret others' behaviors as having hostile intent, even when the behavior is ambiguous or benign.
Research conducted in natural settings to collect data on how people interact with products or environments in real-world conditions.
A cognitive bias where people overestimate the probability of success for difficult tasks and underestimate it for easy tasks.
A cognitive bias where people overemphasize information that is placed prominently or in a way that catches their attention first.
The hypothesis that safety measures may lead to behavioral changes that offset the benefits of the measures, potentially leading to risk compensation.