ch. 3
confirmation bias
a tendency to search for information that supports our preconceptions and to ignore or distort contradictory evidence
heuristic
a thinking strategy that enables quick, efficient judgments
behavioral confirmation
a type of self-fulfilling prophecy whereby people's social expectations lead them to behave in ways that cause others to confirm their expectations
When the persistence of one's initial conceptions are discredited, but an explanation of why the belief might be true survives, this persistence is identified as:
belief perseverance
______ intuition appears in how we take in, store, and retrieve social information
illusory
counterfactual thinking
imagining alternative scenarios and outcomes that might have happened, but didn't
misinformation effect
incorporating misleading information into one's memory of an event
Mitchell, Thompson, and colleagues report that people recall mildly pleasant events more favorably than they experienced them, a phenomenon called:
rosy retrospective
Daniel Kahneman:
we have two brain systems (system 1, system 2, heuristics)
Herb Simon (bounded rationality):
we use short cuts to think about and make decisions, otherwise we would be exhausted
availability heuristic
A cognitive rule that judges the likelihood of things in terms of their availability in memory. If instances of something come readily to mind, we presume it to be commonplace.
priming
activating particular associations in memory
spontaneous recovery
an effortless, automatic inference of a trait after exposure to someones behavior
self-fulfilling prophecy
an expectation that causes you to act in ways that make that expectation come true.
dispositional attribution
attributing behavior to the person's disposition and traits
people often choose their news sources and facebook friends to align with their beliefs, a phenomenon known as:
ideological echo chambers
Misatribution
mistakenly attributing a behavior to the wrong source
illusory correlation
perception of a relationship where none exists, or perception of a stronger relationship than actually exists
we worry about remote possibilities while ignoring higher probabilities. Social scientists refer to this as our:
probability neglect
Changing our memory of past behaviors to fit current perspectives or attitudes is called ______ of past behaviors.
reconstruction
embodied cognition
the mutual influence of bodily sensations on cognitive preferences and social judgments
regression toward the average
the statistical tendency for extreme scores or extreme behavior to return toward one's average
fundamental attribution error
the tendency for observers, when analyzing another's behavior, to underestimate the impact of the situation and to overestimate the impact of personal disposition
representativeness heuristic
the tendency to presume, sometimes despite contrary odds, that someone or something belongs to a particular group if resembling (representing) a typical member
attribution theory
the theory of how we explain others behavior- for example by attributing it to external situations or internal dispositions
Anthony Greenwald describes our tendency to revise the past to suit our present views as having _____ egos
totalitarian