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Michael Crichton, coiner of the term. The Gell-Mann amnesia effect is a cognitive bias describing the tendency of individuals to critically assess media reports in a domain they are knowledgeable about, yet continue to trust reporting in other areas despite recognizing similar potential inaccuracies.
In a speech in 2002, Crichton coined the term Gell-Mann amnesia effect to describe the phenomenon of experts reading articles within their fields of expertise and finding them to be error-ridden and full of misunderstanding, but seemingly forgetting those experiences when reading articles in the same publications written on topics outside of ...
Attaching this phenomena to Gell-Mann is inappropriate. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Tedweverka (talk • contribs) 19:57, 12 January 2019 (UTC) You obviously didn't read the text of Michael Crichton's talk, which is the main point of this Wikipedia article. — Quicksilver (Hydrargyrum) T @ 14:19, 25 May 2019 (UTC)
A feature film is in the works for Michael Crichton and James Patterson's bestselling thriller, Eruption.The book was released last week, and is already No. 1 on Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Apple.
Gell-Mann amnesia effect was nominated for deletion. The discussion was closed on 15 August 2019 with a consensus to merge. Its contents were merged into Michael Crichton. The original page is now a redirect to this page. For the contribution history and old versions of the redirected article, please see its history; for its talk page, see here.
EXCLUSIVE: Michael Crichton’s brilliant mix of science and narrative resulted in north of $10 billion in film and TV revenue and 250 million books sold. Now, the estate of the author who died in ...
“Eruption” is the completion of a partial manuscript found by the late Michael Crichton’s wife, Sherri, and finished by James Patterson. The plot itself revolves around the imminent eruption ...
Gell-Mann referred to the scheme as the eightfold way, because of the octets of particles in the classification (the term is a reference to the Eightfold Path of Buddhism). [3] [15] Gell-Mann, along with Maurice Lévy, developed the sigma model of pions, which describes low-energy pion interactions. [49]