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  2. Precognition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Precognition

    Precognition (from the Latin prae-'before', and cognitio 'acquiring knowledge') is the purported psychic phenomenon of seeing, or otherwise becoming directly aware of, events in the future. There is no accepted scientific evidence that precognition is a real effect, and it is widely considered to be pseudoscience . [ 1 ]

  3. Extrasensory perception - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extrasensory_perception

    Second sight is an alleged form of extrasensory perception, whereby a person perceives information, in the form of a vision, about future events before they happen (precognition), or about things or events at remote locations (remote viewing). [3] [4] There is no evidence that second sight exists. Reports of second sight are known only from ...

  4. Hindsight bias - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hindsight_bias

    After an event has occurred, people often believe that they could have predicted or perhaps even known with a high degree of certainty what the outcome of the event would be before it occurred. Hindsight bias may cause distortions of memories of what was known or believed before an event occurred and is a significant source of overconfidence in ...

  5. List of cognitive biases - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cognitive_biases

    Sometimes called the "I-knew-it-all-along" effect, or the "Hindsight is 20/20" effect, is the tendency to see past events as having been predictable [98] before they happened. Impact bias The tendency to overestimate the length or the intensity of the impact of future feeling states.

  6. Psychic staring effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychic_staring_effect

    A 1913 study by John E. Coover asked ten subjects to state whether or not they could sense an experimenter looking at them, over a period of 100 possible staring periods. . The subjects' answers were correct 50.2% of the time, a result that Coover called an "astonishing approximation" of pure chance.

  7. Frequency illusion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frequency_illusion

    The frequency illusion (also known as the Baader–Meinhof phenomenon), is a cognitive bias in which a person notices a specific concept, word, or product more frequently after recently becoming aware of it. The name "Baader–Meinhof phenomenon" was coined in 1994 by Terry Mullen in a letter to the St. Paul Pioneer Press. [1]

  8. 20 Things Millennials Did On The Internet That Would Make No ...

    www.aol.com/20-things-millennials-did-internet...

    The internet feels depressingly bleak these days: AI slop and bots are all over social media. We all exist in our own little online echo chambers.

  9. Cognition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cognition

    Piaget is known for studying the cognitive development in children, having studied his own three children and their intellectual development, from which he would come to a theory of cognitive development that describes the developmental stages of childhood.