Pseudo Set Framing
The cognitive bias where people treat a set of items as more significant when they are perceived as a cohesive group.
The cognitive bias where people treat a set of items as more significant when they are perceived as a cohesive group.
A decision-making strategy that involves choosing an option that meets the minimum requirements rather than seeking the optimal solution, balancing effort and outcome.
The study of how individuals make choices among alternatives and the principles that guide these choices.
The theory that people adjust their behavior in response to the perceived level of risk, often taking more risks when they feel more protected.
The study of structures of consciousness as experienced from the first-person point of view.
A cognitive bias where people remember scenes as being more expansive than they actually were.
A Gestalt principle suggesting that elements are perceived as a single unit or group if they share an organizing visual cue like bullet points, or connecting lines.
A cognitive bias where people perceive an outcome as certain while it is actually uncertain, based on how information is presented.
The idea that self-control or willpower draws upon a limited pool of mental resources that can be used up.