영어에서 Confirmation bias 을 사용하는 예와 한국어로 번역
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Confirmation bias.
It's called confirmation bias.
Confirmation bias is easily seen in politics.
Ever hear of confirmation bias?
Confirmation bias: why you make terrible life choices.
Ever heard of confirmation bias?
Confirmation Bias- Occurs from the direct influence of desire on beliefs.
For the remark about confirmation bias.
This confirmation bias will increase confidence in the judgment you have made.
Have you ever heard of Confirmation Bias?
The term confirmation bias was coined by the English psychologist Peter Wason.
Fox News's business model is based on confirmation bias.
A new study explains how confirmation bias keeps beliefs steadfast.
If I want to have compassion, I have to do something that goes against my implicit confirmation bias.”.
It's not hard to see why confirmation bias can lead to bad decisions.
We must start by changing how we approach science communication and overcome the confirmation bias.
This type of complete view can help us avoid confirmation bias in our analysis. Maintaining the human touch.
You would think that the availability of mountains of information could protect you from the confirmation bias.
This is called confirmation bias(or“my-side bias,” or“verification bias”).
This so-called“filter bubble” effect may isolate people from diverse perspectives, strengthening confirmation bias.
This distribution shows the impact of confirmation bias, with Republicans much more likely to believe Trump's evidence-free claims.
You might call this just being stubborn, but psychologists have a different name for it: the Confirmation bias.
Science, through repetition of observations, turns anecdote into data, reduces confirmation bias and accepts that theories can be updated in the face of evidence.
In any event, all the research I read supports this post's claims(uh-oh,I think I just fell for the Confirmation bias).
Confirmation bias also manifests as a tendency to select information from sources that already agree with our views(which probably comes from the social group that we relate too).
If we ever needed an example of“downward” social comparison that exemplifies confirmation bias, the US presidential election serves us well.
Much like group polarisation and confirmation bias, overconfidence can arise when team members repeatedly confirm one another's opinions, or when common, hypothesis-confirming arguments are shared among group members.
Those who have a strong partisan perspective will likely not change their opinions, due to what psychologists term“confirmation bias,” the tendency to misinterpret new information in light of our current beliefs as opposed to objective facts.
Given the human tendency to look for information that supports existing beliefs rather than breaking new ground(confirmation bias), unverified news that fit with the common audience's perception of North Korea typically generates more interest than does news about North Korea's growing private economy, for instance, or debunking its urban legends.
Indeed, both more homogeneous groups that lack diversity of options, and groups who are demonstrably wrong in their judgement, may exhibit higher confidence than more diverse,higher performing groups- their unrealistic confidence may indeed worsen confirmation bias tendencies and make the group less likely to seek out evidence, information, or opinions from others(Strauss et al., 2009).