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  2. Hindsight bias - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hindsight_bias

    Hindsight bias. Hindsight bias, also known as the knew-it-all-along phenomenon[1] or creeping determinism, [2] is the common tendency for people to perceive past events as having been more predictable than they were. [3][4] After an event has occurred, people often believe that they could have predicted or perhaps even known with a high degree ...

  3. Deese–Roediger–McDermott paradigm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deese–Roediger...

    Deese–Roediger–McDermott paradigm. The Deese–Roediger–McDermott (DRM) paradigm is a procedure in cognitive psychology used to study false memory in humans. The procedure was pioneered by James Deese in 1959, but it was not until Henry L. Roediger III and Kathleen McDermott extended the line of research in 1995 that the paradigm became ...

  4. Time perception - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_perception

    Time perception. In psychology and neuroscience, time perception or chronoception is the subjective experience, or sense, of time, which is measured by someone's own perception of the duration of the indefinite and unfolding of events. [1][2][3] The perceived time interval between two successive events is referred to as perceived duration.

  5. Locus of control - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Locus_of_control

    Locus of control. A person with an external locus of control attributes academic success or failure to luck or chance, a higher power or the influence of another person, rather than their own actions. They also struggle more with procrastination and difficult tasks. Locus of control is the degree to which people believe that they, as opposed to ...

  6. Unconscious inference - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unconscious_inference

    Unconscious inference. In perceptual psychology, unconscious inference (German: unbewusster Schluss), also referred to as unconscious conclusion, [1] is a term coined in 1867 by the German physicist and polymath Hermann von Helmholtz to describe an involuntary, pre-rational and reflex -like mechanism which is part of the formation of visual ...

  7. Gestalt psychology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gestalt_psychology

    Gestalt psychology, ... experience the illusion of movement between one location and the other. He noted that this was a perception of motion absent any moving object ...

  8. Causal reasoning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Causal_reasoning

    Causal reasoning. Causal reasoning is the process of identifying causality: the relationship between a cause and its effect. The study of causality extends from ancient philosophy to contemporary neuropsychology; assumptions about the nature of causality may be shown to be functions of a previous event preceding a later one.

  9. Curse of knowledge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curse_of_knowledge

    A study by Susan Birch and Paul Bloom involving Yale University undergraduate students used the curse of knowledge concept to explain the idea that the ability of people to reason about another person's actions is compromised by the knowledge of the outcome of an event. The perception the participant had of the plausibility of an event also ...