10 Cognitive Biases That Make Life Harder

A cognitive bias is essentially just an error in the way you process information. It causes you to misinterpret or misunderstand information, and you end up coming to the wrong decision or conclusion without realizing you’ve made any mistake. They can be hard to realize they exist, especially since some of them are really weird. But the fact that they can make your life difficult means they’re worth identifying so you can work around them.

10. The beaten track effect

Let's say you have to walk across town to your favorite restaurant. There's a way you always take to get there, and then there's a way your friend says is much faster. So you take your friend's shortcut and realize it's not a shortcut at all, but a much longer route. When you finally get to the restaurant, you look at your watch and see that you've gotten there about two minutes earlier than if you'd taken the normal route. How is that possible?

Effect off the beaten path convinces us that the route we know is faster than other routes, even if it is not. This is because the route you know so familiar, that there are no surprises and nothing that could interest you. You can effectively switch off your brain while traveling. But a new route has a lot of new things. New traffic, new landmarks, new landscapes.

There are so many things that can engage your senses that you feel like you're wasting more time on this new route, even though it's legitimately faster than the old route. And when you're traveling on the old route, you often underestimate how long it takes to get there, which can lead to you being late.

9. Spotlight effect

Have you ever gone out somewhere and felt like everyone was looking at you? Do you have food on your face? Is your fly unzipped? Is there a stain on your shirt? What the hell is everyone looking at?

While it's possible that any of these things could have attracted the attention of strangers, there's a good chance that you're suffering from spotlight effect This nasty little cognitive distortion convinces you that people are paying more attention to your awkward habits than they actually do. Not only will it make you feel like people are noticing something that embarrasses you, but you'll also feel like those people care about you a lot more than they actually do.

In tests of how this works, people are asked to wear a shirt they find embarrassing and then perform a task in a room with strangers. They are then asked how many people they think noticed their embarrassing shirt. They guessed 50% . Only 25% people noticed. In another study, when they wore a less embarrassing shirt, participants still expected 50% people to notice, but this time only 10% people noticed. This means that no one cares what you look like, even if you're convinced they do.

8. Dysrationalia

Do you know someone who is incredibly smart but has a bad habit of doing stupid things? This is not uncommon and can be the result of something called dysrationalia. This is what happens when you are very smart but not necessarily very rational, because the two should not go hand in hand. In fact, being highly intelligent can make things worse because you may be convinced that you are so smart that you can't make a terrible decision, and as a result you will be able to find evidence to support your bad decisions .

In one test, participants received a cash reward if they blindly pulled out red marmalade from a bowl. One bowl had nine whites and one red. The other had 92 whites and eight reds. They were also told how many were in each. Even knowing the odds, 30% to 40% chose the larger bowl with the worse odds simply because it had more red candies.

Dysrationalia is the same thing that makes you buy something expensive when it's on sale because it's not as expensive as it could be. Or put your money on black at roulette because it's been red four times in a row. There's no intelligence in the choices, but we make them anyway.

7. The IKEA effect

Have you ever wondered why IKEA is so popular? Or why anything homemade is generally considered better than the alternative? The Effect IKEA holds the key. It makes you feel like something is more valuable or important if you made or assembled it yourself.

Of course, there's nothing weird about taking pride in making something with your own hands, but research has shown that people who assemble things themselves often hold them in the same high regard as similar things made by experts, no matter how amateurish, and often assume that others will feel the same way. The effect only works if the task is completed, of course. If the person fails to create the thing or it is subsequently destroyed, the IKEA effect goes away.

6. The Google Effect

While some biases are as old as humanity, others are new adaptations of the world we live in. One such bias is known as Google effect , and it’s kind of a sneaky problem. The Google effect, also known as digital amnesia, causes you to forget things that are fairly easy to find online. Basically, your brain has decided that it doesn’t need to hold on to certain things because Google already knows about them, so you can just look them up later. We’re essentially outsourcing memory to Google.

In one simple test, participants in two groups were shown quizzes One group was told they had to remember what they read because the information would be deleted. The other was led to believe it could be found later if they needed it. The group that was told to remember the information ended up remembering much more than the other group, which is consistent with what we know about things like how students prepare for exams. They often don't retain information because they believe they can Google it when they need it.

5. Halo effect

If you want to see halo effect in action, just log into social media any day at any time and it won't be hard to spot. It's the tendency to think that someone who is beautiful on the outside must be beautiful on the inside. So your brain is tricked into thinking that an attractive person must also have a good personality, or more commonly known as judging a book by its cover.

Technically, the halo effect isn't even related to looks or personality. Anything that has a feature that you find attractive can trigger it by making you think generally good things about it. A company you like has a new product, and you immediately believe that the product is good. Your favorite director is making a new movie, and you're sure that the movie will be great.

An experiment conducted back in the 1940s showed how easily people are influenced in this way. Participants were given descriptions of two people , which read as follows:

Answer: Smart - Hardworking - Impulsive - Critical - Stubborn - Envious

B: Envious - Stubborn - Critical - Impulsive - Hardworking - Intelligent

Participants were asked to describe in detail what they thought about Person A and Person B. Person A was viewed in a much more positive light, with his shortcomings ignored or rationalized, while Person B was seen as a problem. But you'll notice that both A and B were described in exactly the same way, only in reverse.

Thank goodness for the idea of first impressions. If your initial impression of something is positive, it really does shape how your subsequent feelings are formed. Plus, we want to believe we're right, so when we have a good first impression, we look for ways to prove it's right.

4. Rhyme as a consequence of cause

Some cognitive biases start to make sense when you see how a pattern of behavior or misperception can create them. But the Rhyme-as-Cause effect just makes you feel stupid when you hear it. We tend to perceive a statement as more truthful if it rhymes. That's it. Maybe that's how Johnnie Cochran got O.J. Simpson off the whole rhyme thing. if it doesn't fit, you have to justify " during his arguments.

In 1999, this effect was studied when researchers took rhyming aphorisms, simple little statements like "adversity unites enemies," and then reworded them so that they meant exactly the same thing without the rhyme. In this case, "adversity unites enemies." People were asked to read the statements and rate how true they were. On average, rhyming sentences were rated on 22% more reliable , than unrhymed ones, despite the fact that they said literally the same thing.

Rhyming advertising slogans exploit this effect because it works. A rhyming slogan is considered more reliable and truthful than a non-rhyming one, at least when it comes to products. The same has not been proven for human rights and environmental protection, and that is probably for the best.

As for why this happens, blame your brain's tendency to like beautiful things. We find rhymes aesthetically pleasing, so even on a subconscious level we attach more importance to a statement that sounds pleasing to our ears, regardless of the content.

3. The tip of the tongue effect

We probably all once upon a time encountered with tip of tongue phenomenon . You know the word you want to say; you understand the context and how to use it, you can even think of related words, but that particular word just eludes you.

When this happens, you may get an amazing amount information about the word, even beyond how to use it correctly in a sentence. Even the first sound and the number of syllables will come to mind.

There is no single reason why this happens, and it can be influenced by things as diverse as brain damage and old age, as well as how often you typically use the word. On the other hand, the condition is usually temporary, and at some point the word you are looking for will come back to you either on its own or with some kind of clue.

2. The winner effect

Remember a few years ago when the entire internet seemed to hate group Nickelback? People still write articles about it. But at the same time, Nickelback is one of the most successful bands of the last 20 years. By 2011 they sold more 50 million albums. So how can an extremely popular band also be extremely unpopular? The bandwagon effect may be the answer.

When people start believe in certain things just because other people think so, it's a bandwagon effect. So it's not based on any evidence, just perception. And even if you don't do you believe in it , you'll agree with it because that's what other people do. It's like a low-key brand of peer pressure mass hysteria. Things like groupthink and herd mentality also come into play here.

So if the internet keeps telling you that everyone hates Nickelback, then we'll all join in on the band's bandwagon while they ride on all the money they've made from their platinum albums.

1. The Cheerleader Effect

Have you ever seen someone you found attractive in a group of people, and then when you saw them alone, they seemed less attractive? Well, that's your brain playing tricks on you again. The Cheerleader Effect arises , when you perceive a face as more attractive when there are other people around it. Alone, the same face is perceived as less attractive .

This phenomenon is a result of the way our brains organize information into sets. You will subconsciously begin to average all of these faces together, making them generally more attractive to your mind than a long face that has nothing to compare it to.

This may have practical application for you in the real world if you want to be perceived as more attractive, say, on a dating site. Create a profile that shows you with other people, and you will be perceived as sexier. Of course, when you finally meet someone and they see you alone, you may be disappointed.