bias
(noun)
An inclination, predisposition, or prejudice toward something.
(noun)
An inclination toward something; predisposition, partiality, prejudice, preference, predilection.
Examples of bias in the following topics:
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Biases in Experimental Design: Validity, Reliability, and Other Issues
- Research studies with small sample sizes, high variability, and sampling bias are usually not representative of the general population.
- A study's external validity can be threatened by such factors as small sample sizes, high variability, and sampling bias.
- Sampling bias occurs when the sample participating in the study is not representative of the general population.
- Response bias (also known as "self-selection bias") occurs when only certain types of people respond to a survey or study.
- Many of the admittedly "non-scientific" polls taken on television or websites suffer from response bias.
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Memory Distortions and Biases
- There are many identified types of bias that influence people's memories.
- Hindsight bias is the "I knew it all along!"
- In this type of bias, remembered events will seem predictable, even if at the time of encoding they were a complete surprise.
- This is known as the self-serving bias.
- Evaluate how mood, suggestion, and imagination can lead to memory errors or bias
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Heuristics and Cognitive Biases
- When interpreting data, a researcher must avoid cognitive bias and be aware of the use of heuristics to avoid drawing incorrect conclusions.
- However, this heuristic can introduce bias in research, in which it is by definition important to remain an objective observer.
- A cognitive bias is the mind's tendency to come to incorrect conclusions based on a variety of factors.
- Hindsight bias occurs in psychological research when researchers form "post hoc hypotheses."
- Confirmation bias is especially dangerous in psychological research.
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Cultural Influences on Perception
- Attribution theory, also called actor-observer bias, focuses on the attribution or causes of an action.
- The Egocentric bias causes individuals to think more positively about themselves than others think of them.
- The Over-confidence bias causes individuals to overestimate their own confidence.
- The Status Quo bias demonstrates that individuals give preference to things which are familiar.
- The Ingroup bias shows a preference for individuals who are in one's own group affiliation.
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Problem-Solving
- The way we solve problems can be influenced by algorithms, heuristics, intuition, insight, confirmation bias, and functional fixedness.
- These spontaneous decisions are often associated with functional fixedness, confirmation bias, insight and intuition phenomenology, heuristics, and algorithms.
- Confirmation bias arises when a person makes decisions based upon what he or she already believes to be true.
- Some of these mental processes include functional fixedness, confirmation bias, insight and intuition phenomenology, heuristics, and algorithms.
- Examine how algorithms, heuristics, intuition, insight, confirmation bias, and functional fixedness can influence judgment and decision making.
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Attribution
- People are susceptible to bias and error when making attributions about themselves and others.
- A few common such biases include the fundamental attribution error, the self-serving bias, the actor-observer bias, and the just-world hypothesis.
- Self-serving bias is the tendency of individuals to make internal attributions when their actions have a positive outcome but external attributions when their actions have a negative outcome.
- This bias lets us continue to see ourselves in a favorable light and protects our self-esteem; we take credit for our successes and pin our failures on other factors.
- People from individualist cultures are more inclined to make the fundamental attribution error and demonstrate self-serving bias than people from collectivist cultures.
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Surveys and Interviews
- Surveys are a low-cost option for gathering a large amount of data, but they are also susceptible to reporting bias.
- The major issue with this method is its accuracy: since surveys depend on subjects' motivation, honesty, memory, and ability to respond, they are very susceptible to bias.
- While survey research is one of the most common types of psychological study, it can be difficult to create a survey that is free of bias and that reliably measures the factors it aims to capture.
- The way a question is written can confuse a participant or bias their response, and poorly framed or ambiguous questions will likely result in meaningless responses with very little value.
- While survey research is one of the most common types of psychological study, it can be difficult to create a survey that is free of bias and that reliably measures the factors it aims to capture.
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Social Psychology
- The field is also concerned with common cognitive biases—such as the fundamental attribution error, the actor-observer bias, the self-serving bias, and the just-world hypothesis—that influence our behavior and our perceptions of events.
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Group Differences in Intelligence
- Third, while the data clearly shows differences in test scores, it remains possible that the test takers were the victims of inherent bias and thus no difference actually exists.
- Potential causes include socioeconomics, test bias, and stereotype threat.
- Test bias refers to the construct of the test itself as it is applied to different populations.
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Considerations for Eyewitness Testimony
- ., the own-race bias, cross-race effect, other-ethnicity effect, same-race advantage) is one factor thought to affect the accuracy of facial recognition.
- The ambiguity in eyewitness memory of facial recognition can be attributed to the divergent strategies that are used when under the influence of racial bias.