Main.CognitiveBiases History

Hide minor edits - Show changes to markup

November 02, 2009, at 12:10 PM by 112.119.72.238 -
Changed line 14 from:
  • Katie Liljenquist - Clean scent affects generosity and charitable giving
to:
  • Katie Liljenquist (2009) - Clean scent affects generosity and charitable giving
November 02, 2009, at 12:10 PM by 112.119.72.238 -
Changed lines 15-19 from:

@Isen and Levin (1972) - 87.5% of participants who had just found a dime in the coin in a phone booth helped a confederate (of the experimenter) who dropped a folder of papers, while only 4% who had found no coin helped.@

Also - J.M. Darley and C.D. Batson (1973). From Jerusalem to Jericho: A study of situational and dispositional variables in helping behavior. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 27, pp. 100–119.

to:
  • Isen and Levin (1972) - 87.5% of participants who had just found a dime in the coin in a phone booth helped a confederate (of the experimenter) who dropped a folder of papers, while only 4% who had found no coin helped.
  • J.M. Darley and C.D. Batson (1973). From Jerusalem to Jericho: A study of situational and dispositional variables in helping behavior. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 27, pp. 100–119.
November 02, 2009, at 12:09 PM by 112.119.72.238 -
Changed lines 14-15 from:
  • Clean scent affects generosity and charitable giving
to:
  • Katie Liljenquist - Clean scent affects generosity and charitable giving
November 02, 2009, at 12:09 PM by 112.119.72.238 -
Added line 20:
November 02, 2009, at 12:08 PM by 112.119.72.238 -
Added lines 1-19:

Cognitive biases

Cultural / religious biases vs cognitive biases

Framing

Priming

  • hypnotic priming

Moral biases

  • Gender biases in academia
  • Clean scent affects generosity and charitable giving

@Isen and Levin (1972) - 87.5% of participants who had just found a dime in the coin in a phone booth helped a confederate (of the experimenter) who dropped a folder of papers, while only 4% who had found no coin helped.@

Also - J.M. Darley and C.D. Batson (1973). From Jerusalem to Jericho: A study of situational and dispositional variables in helping behavior. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 27, pp. 100–119.