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tylersmith 7 days ago

Yes, it's called bias.

anonfordays 7 days ago | parent [-]

It's accurate, so by definition it cannot be bias.

jpollock 7 days ago | parent | next [-]

It's a cognitive bias, since we remember the events that match our expectations and don't keep track of experiment over time.

anigbrowl 6 days ago | parent [-]

This is a rather large assumption. I have had plenty of times when I thought I had noticed a trend of some sort and turned out to be mistaken, and so stopped relying on the heuristic. Insisting that everyone is biased (as opposed to observing that anyone can be) is a good way to filter out unexpected and perhaps unwelcome observations.

Manuel_D 6 days ago | parent | prev [-]

You perceive it to be accurate, that doesn't mean it is accurate. Furthermore, these sorts of things are highly subject to post-rationalization. Did you write down on a piece of paper what you expected before you clicked? Or did you just click and think to yourself "yup, that's what I expected"?