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Timeline of cognitive biases

523 bytes added, 11:19, 7 April 2020
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| 1969 || || Researchers confirm the {{w|Ben Franklin effect}}.<ref>{{cite web |title=To Become Super-Likable, Practice “The Ben Franklin Effect” |url=https://medium.com/swlh/practice-the-ben-franklin-effect-to-become-super-likable-23f98bf1ecdb |website=medium.com |accessdate=13 March 2020}}</ref>
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| 1971 || || Lichtenstein and Slovic study and experiment on the {{w|preference reversal}} inconsistency.<ref name="Atladóttir"/>
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| 1974 || || " One of the common heuristics used when making judgements is the anchoring and adjustment heuristic, first described in 1974 (Tversky and Kahneman, 1974). In this heuristic, when people estimate an unknown quantity (say, the length of the average American commute) they begin with an ‘anchor’ of information they do know (say, their own commute) and adjust until an acceptable value is reached. This anchor could be based on information given to a person (such as the advertised price of new car before bargaining) or it could be drawn from personal experience (the price a friend paid for a new car)."<ref name="One of the common">{{cite journal |last1=Ralph |first1=Kelcie |last2=Delbosc |first2=Alexa |title=I’m multimodal, aren’t you? How ego-centric anchoring biases experts’ perceptions of travel patterns |doi=10.1016/j.tra.2017.04.027 |url=One of the common heuristics used when making judgements is the anchoring and adjustment heuristic, first described in 1974 (Tversky and Kahneman, 1974). In this heuristic, when people estimate an unknown quantity (say, the length of the average American commute) they begin with an ‘anchor’ of information they do know (say, their own commute) and adjust until an acceptable value is reached. This anchor could be based on information given to a person (such as the advertised price of new car before bargaining) or it could be drawn from personal experience (the price a friend paid for a new car).}}</ref>
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| 1989 || || The term "{{w|curse of knowledge}}" is coined in a ''{{w|Journal of Political Economy}}'' article by economists {{w|Colin Camerer}}, {{w|George Loewenstein}}, and Martin Weber.
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| 1990 || || Kahneman, Knetsch and Thaler publish a paper containing the first experimental test of the {{w|Endowment Effect}}.<ref name="Atladóttir">{{cite journal |last1=Atladóttir |first1=Kristín |title=The Endowment Effect and other biases in creative goods transactions |url=https://skemman.is/bitstream/1946/8659/1/20.The_Endowment_Effect_Kristin.pdf |issn=1670-8288}}</ref>
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| 1995 || || "Implicit bias was first described in a 1995 publication by Tony Greenwald and Mahzarin Banaji"<ref>{{cite web |title=PROJECT IMPLICIT LECTURES AND WORKSHOPS |url=https://www.projectimplicit.net/lectures.html |website=projectimplicit.net |accessdate=12 March 2020}}</ref>
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