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Timeline of cognitive biases

667 bytes added, 09:41, 8 April 2020
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| 1961 || || {{w|Ambiguity effect}} is first described by {{w|Daniel Ellsberg}}.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Borcherding|first1=Katrin|last2=Laričev|first2=Oleg Ivanovič|last3=Messick|first3=David M.|title=Contemporary Issues in Decision Making|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=W3l9AAAAMAAJ|year=1990|publisher=North-Holland|isbn=978-0-444-88618-7|page=50}}</ref>
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| 1964 || || {{w|Telescoping effect}}. The original work on telescoping is usually attributed to a 1964 article by Neter and Waksberg in the ''[[Journal of the American Statistical Association]]''.<ref name=Rubin>{{cite journal |last1=Rubin |first1=David C. |last2=Baddeley |first2=Alan D. |date=1989 |title=Telescoping is not time compression: A model |journal=Memory & Cognition |doi=10.3758/BF03202626 |pmid=2811662 |volume=17 |issue=6|pages=653–661}}</ref> The term telescoping comes from the idea that time seems to shrink toward the present in the way that the distance to objects seems to shrink when they are viewed through a telescope.<ref name=Rubin/>
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| 1964 || || The first recorded statement of the concept of {{w|Law of the instrument}} is {{w|Abraham Kaplan}}'s: "I call it ''the law of the instrument,'' and it may be formulated as follows: Give a small boy a hammer, and he will find that everything he encounters needs pounding."<ref>
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