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| [[File:Topic Cover - 9.2 Biases.png|thumb]]
| | {{Cover|9.2 Biases}} |
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| As social creatures, humans make decisions in the context of their social environment. This often leads to decisions that tend to conform with the group or obey those in authority, and to judgments that overemphasize the role of individual differences in explaining people's behaviors. We provoke a discussion on the implications of these cognitive biases to society and encourage empathy when judging others. | | As social creatures, humans make decisions in the context of their social environment. This often leads to decisions that tend to conform with the group or obey those in authority, and to judgments that overemphasize the role of individual differences in explaining people's behaviors. We provoke a discussion on the implications of these cognitive biases to society and encourage empathy when judging others. |
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| == The Lesson in Context == | | == The Lesson in Context == |
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| This lesson is in the middle our "heuristics and biases" series and tends to be one of the more popular lessons in the course. It focusses on people's "hot" biases that are more emotionally or socially driven. Unfortunately, people that know about these biases are generally ''not'' actually less likely to fall into them. We choose to teach the students about them anyways. | | This lesson is in the middle our "heuristics and biases" series and tends to be one of the more popular lessons in the course. It focusses on people's "hot" biases that are more emotionally or socially driven. Unfortunately, people that know about these biases are generally ''not'' actually less likely to fall into them. We choose to teach the students about them anyways. |
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| <!-- Expandable section relating this lesson to earlier lessons. --> | | <!-- Expandable section relating this lesson to other lessons. --> |
| {{Expand|Relation to Earlier Lessons| | | {{Expand|Relation to Other Lessons| |
| | '''Earlier Lessons''' |
| {{ContextLesson|8.1 Orders of Understanding}} | | {{ContextLesson|8.1 Orders of Understanding}} |
| {{ContextRelation|Orders of Understanding is about how each event arises from multiple influences, some more important than others. Human behavior, for instance, is affected by both individual differences and by circumstance or context, including pressures to conform and obey, and we often overestimate the former and underestimate the latter (FAE).}} | | {{ContextRelation|Orders of Understanding is about how each event arises from multiple influences, some more important than others. Human behavior, for instance, is affected by both individual differences and by circumstance or context, including pressures to conform and obey, and we often overestimate the former and underestimate the latter (FAE).}} |
| {{ContextLesson|9.1 Heuristics}} | | {{ContextLesson|9.1 Heuristics}} |
| {{ContextRelation|The first lesson on H&B is on "cold" biases around numbers and frequencies. The second lesson (this one) is on "hot" biases, more emotion and value-laden thinking. Both involve heuristics, strategies for making quick judgments that can be useful in some contexts but can also go awry.}} | | {{ContextRelation|The first lesson on H&B is on "cold" biases around numbers and frequencies. The second lesson (this one) is on "hot" biases, more emotion and value-laden thinking. Both involve heuristics, strategies for making quick judgments that can be useful in some contexts but can also go awry.}} |
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| <!-- Expandable section relating this lesson to later lessons. -->
| | '''Later Lessons''' |
| {{Expand|Relation to Later Lessons|
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| {{ContextLesson|10.1 Confirmation Bias}} | | {{ContextLesson|10.1 Confirmation Bias}} |
| {{ContextRelation|Confirmation bias is a broader form of bias in which people tend to look for and believe evidence or arguments supporting what they already believe or expect, and to neglect or dismiss evidence and arguments against what they believe or expect. It can exacerbate other biases, including status quo bias, temporal discounting, and/or the fundamental attribution error.}} | | {{ContextRelation|Confirmation bias is a broader form of bias in which people tend to look for and believe evidence or arguments supporting what they already believe or expect, and to neglect or dismiss evidence and arguments against what they believe or expect. It can exacerbate other biases, including status quo bias, temporal discounting, and/or the fundamental attribution error.}} |
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| {{ContextRelation|Scenario Planning involves considering four different possible future scenarios. It is one strategy that may reduce status quo bias and temporal discounting by making more salient a variety of possible futures, and how they may differ from the present in both desirable and undesirable ways.}} | | {{ContextRelation|Scenario Planning involves considering four different possible future scenarios. It is one strategy that may reduce status quo bias and temporal discounting by making more salient a variety of possible futures, and how they may differ from the present in both desirable and undesirable ways.}} |
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| == Takeaways == | | == Takeaways == |
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