Suffix Effect
The phenomenon where people have a reduced ability to recall the last items in a list when additional, unrelated information is added at the end.
The phenomenon where people have a reduced ability to recall the last items in a list when additional, unrelated information is added at the end.
A cognitive bias where individuals better remember the most recent information they have encountered, influencing decision-making and memory recall.
Also known as Self Relevance Effect, the tendency for individuals to better remember information that is personally relevant or related to themselves.
A phenomenon where people are more likely to remember information when they are in the same state of consciousness as when they learned it.
A cognitive bias where people remember scenes as being more expansive than they actually were.
A phenomenon where information is better remembered if it is generated from one's own mind rather than simply read.
A set of ten general principles for user interface design created by Jakob Nielsen to improve usability.
A psychological effect where exposure to one stimulus influences the response to a subsequent stimulus, without conscious guidance or intention.
The tendency for the first items presented in a sequence to be remembered better than those in the middle.