hidden cognitive biases shaping your decisions
image credit: unsplash
What Are Cognitive Biases?
01
– Mental shortcuts your brain uses to make decisions – They help you cope but often distort reality
image credit: unsplash
Confirmation Bias
02
– You seek info that confirms what you already believe – You ignore opposing evidence
image credit: unsplash
Negativity Bias
03
– You remember bad experiences more strongly – Positive events fade faster in memory
image credit: unsplash
Halo Effect
04
– If someone has one good trait, you assume they’re good overall – Example: Attractive = trustworthy (not always true!)
image credit: unsplash
Anchoring Bias
05
– First information you hear “anchors” your thinking – Example: The first price you hear skews how you judge value
image credit: unsplash
Availability Heuristic
06
image credit: unsplash
– You judge likelihood based on what comes easily to mind – Example: Fearing plane crashes because they’re sensational
Spotlight Effect
07
– You think everyone notices your flaws or mistakes – In reality, most people are too focused on themselves
image credit: unspalsh
Dunning-Kruger Effect
08
– People with little knowledge overestimate their abilities – Experts often doubt themselves more
image credit: unspalsh
Why Knowing Biases Matters
09
– You can’t fully erase them – But you can become more self-aware
image credit: unsplash
How to Work With Biases
10
– Pause before reacting – Ask: “Am I seeing the full picture?” – Seek diverse perspectives
image credit: unsplash
Final Thought:
11
– You’re human; biases are part of the package – Awareness = power to make wiser choices
image credit: unsplash