Here I go with my first LIII question.
I’m a bit confused with some of the behavioral biases since they seem to be quite overlapped/difficult to distinguish, if not seem the same.
When it comes to representativeness bias (cognitive error that influences decision-making), it is considered as placing too much weigh on new data. Later on, amongst the information-processing biases we have availability bias, which results from putting too much emphasis on info readily available.
Can anyone help me out with a better distinction of the two? Also, I see that they could be “cumulative”, no? What if the data is new and readily available?
Thanks!
I’m a bit confused with some of the behavioral biases since they seem to be quite overlapped/difficult to distinguish, if not seem the same.
When it comes to representativeness bias (cognitive error that influences decision-making), it is considered as placing too much weigh on new data. Later on, amongst the information-processing biases we have availability bias, which results from putting too much emphasis on info readily available.
Can anyone help me out with a better distinction of the two? Also, I see that they could be “cumulative”, no? What if the data is new and readily available?
Thanks!