Untangling Cognitive Bias Part 1 Tactile

Untangling Cognitive Bias Part 1 Tactile Your brain has to filter through a lot of information on a daily basis. it gets lazy and takes shortcuts to make life “easier,” using pre existing patterns to judge what’s important and ignore the rest. these shortcuts form the foundation of cognitive bias. Our relationship with bias could use a bit of untangling. well, what is it exactly? bias is a word that can run the gamut from lightly dismissing unwanted feedback (“they’re just biased”), to #fakenews, to flawed research that skews….

Untangling Cognitive Bias Part 1 Tactile Within a relatively healthy workspace, we can begin taking rational steps in the right direction towards reducing bias. while researching part one of this series on bias (and from past experience), i found a pattern arise to help overcome bias. At tactile, we design physical and digital tools, and if our team isn’t careful, this bias can negatively affect our work. bias can lead us to only look for information we want to see (confirmation bias). Cognitive biases are systematic errors in thinking that affect how we process information. these biases often operate unconsciously, shaping our perceptions without us even realizing it. Study with quizlet and memorize flashcards containing terms like one sense affecting another, self serving bias, priming and more.

Untangling Cognitive Bias Part 1 Tactile Cognitive biases are systematic errors in thinking that affect how we process information. these biases often operate unconsciously, shaping our perceptions without us even realizing it. Study with quizlet and memorize flashcards containing terms like one sense affecting another, self serving bias, priming and more. In an era of information overload and rapid decision making, understanding cognitive biases is more crucial than ever. these mental shortcuts influence every aspect of our lives, from personal. Previously, tactile’s senior ux designer, nate grubbs, explained the basics of cognitive bias and how it affects design. in nate’s part 2 on cognitive bias, he discusses how we can move past it and the rational steps to move in the right direction. Critically, pattern completion and pattern separation are two interacting cognitive processes, and the relative higher weighting of one of the other process causes memory biases: the higher weightening of pattern completion over pattern separation mediates a bias towards favoring the perception of known over novel experiences (due to the. We generated dot kinetogram stimuli involving motion in three different directional axes (‘horizontal’, ‘vertical’, and ‘oblique’) on the ventral surface of the hand. using bayesian statistics, we found clear evidence that participants were able to discriminate tactile motion direction.
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