Cognitive bias cheat sheet. - Because thinking is hard.
Cognitive bias cheat sheet Because thinking is hard.
I've spent many years referencing Wikipedias list of cognitive biases whenever I have a hunch that a certain type of thinking is an official bias but I cant recall the name or details. Its been an invaluable reference for helping me identify the hidden flaws in my own thinking. Nothing else Ive come across seems to be both as comprehensive and as succinct.
However, honestly, the Wikipedia page is a bit of a tangled mess. Despite trying to absorb the information of this page many times over the years, very little of it seems to stick. I often scan it and feel like Im not able to find the bias Im looking for, and then quickly forget what Ive learned. I think this has to do with how the page has organically evolved over the years. Today, it groups 175 biases into vague categories (decision-making biases, social biases, memory errors, etc) that dont really feel mutually exclusive to me, and then lists them alphabetically within categories. There are duplicates a-plenty, and many similar biases with different names, scattered willy-nilly.
Ive taken some time over the last four weeks (Im on paternity leave) to try to more deeply absorb and understand this list, and to try to come up with a simpler, clearer organizing structure to hang these biases off of. Reading deeply about various biases has given my brain something to chew on while I bounce little Louie to sleep.
I started with the raw list of the 175 biases and added them all to a spreadsheet, then took another pass removing duplicates, and grouping similar biases (like bizarreness effect and humor effect) or complementary biases (like optimism bias and pessimism bias). The list came down to about 20 unique biased mental strategies that we use for very specific reasons.