Last updated 5/2020
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280×720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz
Language: English | Size: 8.92 GB | Duration: 6h 48m
Become a better critical thinker by learning how to identify cognitive biases that get in the way of rational thinking.
What you’ll learn
Recognize when you or someone else is potentially operating under a cognitive bias
De-bias your own thinking so that you can process information more rationally
Build stronger arguments by scanning them for potential cognitive bias
Requirements
An interest in improving your critical thinking skills
Description
In this course, you’ll learn a collection of cognitive biases that will improve your critical thinking skills.What is critical thinking?It starts with the word critic…meaning to criticize.Critical thinking is about taking a skeptical look at anything you hear or read.It’s about checking things out before assuming they are true.A good analogy is the antivirus scanner on your computer.It download millions of “signatures” from the company who creates the software.Each signature is tested against each file that the software scans. If anything in the file matches one of the virus “signatures”, that means it’s a potentially dangerous file and will be quarantined.Cognitive biases are similar.In this course youll learn dozens of these “signatures” that will help you debias your thinking so that you are less likely to fall victim to a cognitive bias distorting your thinking.This course is unlike any other course I’ve created.Each lecture has a standard formula:1. The name of the cognitive bias2. Any other synonyms (alternate names) for the cognitive bias3. A simple explanation of the bias4. A real world example of the cognitive bias in action5. Commentary on how the cognitive bias evolved to be adaptive to the environment, and how it may be related to other cognitive biases (if applicable)Get ready to take your thinking skills to the next level.See you on the inside,Timothy
Overview
Section 1: Introduction (Cognitive Bias Vol 1 – Info Overwhelm Errors)
Lecture 1 Introduction
Lecture 2 Download the MP3s of All Lectures Here
Section 2: Vol 1 – The Effects of Priming on Attention
Lecture 3 Availability Heuristic
Lecture 4 Attentional Bias
Lecture 5 Illusory Truth Effect
Lecture 6 Mere Exposure Effect
Lecture 7 Contrast Effect
Lecture 8 Mood-Congruent Memory Bias
Lecture 9 Frequency Illusion
Lecture 10 Empathy Gap
Lecture 11 Omission Bias
Lecture 12 Base Rate Fallacy
Section 3: Vol 1 – The Effects of More Noticeable Things on Attention
Lecture 13 The Bizarreness Effect
Lecture 14 The Humor Effect
Lecture 15 The Picture Superiority Effect
Lecture 16 The Self-Relevance Effect
Lecture 17 Negativity Bias
Section 4: Vol 1 – The Effects of Change on Attention
Lecture 18 Anchoring
Lecture 19 Conservatism
Lecture 20 The Distinction Bias
Lecture 21 The Focusing Effect
Lecture 22 The Framing Effect
Lecture 23 The Money Illusion
Lecture 24 The Weber-Fechner Law
Section 5: Vol 1 – The Varieties of Bias Towards Confirming Evidence
Lecture 25 Confirmation Bias
Lecture 26 Post-Purchase Rationalization
Lecture 27 Choice-Supportive Bias
Lecture 28 The Observer-Expectancy Effect
Lecture 29 The Experimenter’s Bias
Lecture 30 The Ostrich Effect
Section 6: Vol 1 – The Varieties of Bias Against the Objectivity of Other People
Lecture 31 The Bias Blind Spot
Lecture 32 Naive Cynicism
Lecture 33 Naive Realism
Section 7: Vol 2 – Introduction (Cognitive Bias Vol 2 – Missing Info Errors)
Lecture 34 Introduction
Section 8: Vol 2 – How to Avoid Seeing Patterns That Don’t Exist
Lecture 35 Confabulation
Lecture 36 The Clustering Illusion
Lecture 37 Insensitivity to Sample Size
Lecture 38 Neglect of Probability
Lecture 39 The Anecdotal Fallacy
Lecture 40 The Illusion of Validity
Lecture 41 The Masked Man Fallacy
Lecture 42 The Gambler’s Fallacy
Lecture 43 The Hot Hand Fallacy
Lecture 44 Illusory Correlation
Lecture 45 Pareidolia
Lecture 46 Anthropomorphism
Section 9: Vol 2 – How to Avoid Getting Trapped in Stereotype Thinking
Lecture 47 Group Attribution Error
Lecture 48 Ultimate Attribution Error
Lecture 49 Stereotyping
Lecture 50 Essentialism
Lecture 51 Functional Fixedness
Lecture 52 The Moral Credential Effect
Lecture 53 The Just-World Hypothesis
Lecture 54 Authority Bias
Lecture 55 Automation Bias
Lecture 56 The Bandwagon Effect
Lecture 57 The Placebo Effect
Section 10: Vol 2 – How to Avoid the Curse of Familiarity
Lecture 58 Out-Group Homogeneity Bias
Lecture 59 The Cross-Race Effect
Lecture 60 In-Group Bias
Lecture 61 The Halo Effect
Lecture 62 The Cheerleader Effect
Lecture 63 The Positivity Effect
Lecture 64 The Not Invented Here Bias
Lecture 65 Reactive Devaluation
Lecture 66 The Well-Traveled Road Effect
Section 11: Vol 2 – How to Manage the Tendency to Simplify Numbers
Lecture 67 Mental Accounting
Lecture 68 Normalcy Bias
Lecture 69 Zero Sum Bias
Lecture 70 Survivorship Bias
Lecture 71 The Subadditivity Effect
Lecture 72 The Denomination Effect
Lecture 73 The 7 Plus or Minus 2 Effect
Section 12: Vol 2 – How to Avoid Projecting Your Current Mindset onto Your Past and Future..
Lecture 74 The Illusion of Transparency
Lecture 75 The Curse of Knowledge
Lecture 76 The Spotlight Effect
Lecture 77 The Illusion of Asymmetric Insight
Section 13: Vol 2 – How to Avoid Projecting Your Beliefs onto Other People
Lecture 78 Self Consistency Bias
Lecture 79 Restraint Bias
Lecture 80 Projection Bias
Lecture 81 Pro-Innovation Bias
Lecture 82 Time-Saving Bias
Lecture 83 The Planning Fallacy
Lecture 84 Impact Bias
Lecture 85 Moral Luck
Lecture 86 Outcome Bias
Lecture 87 Hindsight Bias
Section 14: Vol 3 – Introduction (Cognitive Bias Vol 3 – Complex Info Errors)
Lecture 88 Introduction
Section 15: Vol 3 – Dealing with Highly Complex Situations
Lecture 89 Occam’s Razor
Lecture 90 The Conjunction Fallacy
Lecture 91 The Bike-Shedding Effect
Lecture 92 The Rhyme as Reason Effect
Lecture 93 Belief Bias
Lecture 94 Information Bias
Section 16: Vol 3 – Social Bias Effects
Lecture 95 Status Quo Bias
Lecture 96 Social Comparison Bias
Lecture 97 The Decoy Effect
Lecture 98 Reactance
Section 17: The Bias Towards Getting Things Done
Lecture 99 The Backfire Effect
Lecture 100 The Endowment Effect
Lecture 101 Processing Difficulty Effect
Lecture 102 The Pseudocertainty Effect
Lecture 103 The Disposition Effect
Lecture 104 Zero-Risk Bias
Lecture 105 Unit Bias
Lecture 106 The Ikea Effect
Lecture 107 The Generation Effect
Lecture 108 The Sunk Cost Fallacy
Section 18: Bias Towards The Immediate Issue
Lecture 109 The Identifiable Victim Effect
Lecture 110 The Appeal to Novelty
Lecture 111 Hyperbolic Discounting
Section 19: The Defensive Stance Bias
Lecture 112 The Peltzman Effect
Lecture 113 Effort Justification
Lecture 114 Trait Ascription Bias
Lecture 115 Defensive Attribution Error
Lecture 116 The Fundamental Attribution Error
Lecture 117 The Illusion of Control
Lecture 118 Self-Serving Bias
Lecture 119 The Barnum Effect
Lecture 120 Optimism Bias
Lecture 121 The Dunning-Kruger Effect
Lecture 122 The False Consensus Effect
Lecture 123 The Third-Person Effect
Lecture 124 Social Desirability Bias
Section 20: Vol 4 – Introduction (Cognitive Bias Vol 4 – False Memory Errors)
Lecture 125 Introduction
Section 21: Vol 4 – Memory Storage Heuristics
Lecture 126 The Google Effect
Lecture 127 The Next-In-Line Effect
Lecture 128 The Testing Effect
Section 22: Vol 4 – Memory Effects of Lists and Sequences of Events
Lecture 129 The Serial Position Effect
Lecture 130 Memory Inhibition
Lecture 131 The Modality Effect
Lecture 132 Duration Neglect
Lecture 133 List-Length Effect
Lecture 134 Misinformation Effect
Lecture 135 Leveling and Sharpening
Section 23: Vol 4 – Memory Deletion Baises
Lecture 136 Fading Affect Bias
Lecture 137 Negativity Bias
Lecture 138 Implicit Associations Part 1
Lecture 139 Implicit Associations Part 2
Section 24: Vol 4 – Memory Source and Spacing Effects
Lecture 140 The Spacing Effect
Lecture 141 Suggestibility
Lecture 142 False Memory
Lecture 143 Cryptomnesia
Lecture 144 Source Confusion
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