What Is a Good List of Cognitive Biases?

by Fabian | CN Apps, Bias Busting Techniques

Public and semi-public catalogues of cognitive biases frequently claim there are hundreds of them. It is, of course, not known to everyone that these catalogues often contain a cocktail of 1) cognitive phenomena with well-studied effects, 2) broad labels that different researchers measure in different ways, and 3) vague or overlapping terms that can mean different things and are hard to check properly. Whether this is a problem or not depends on what you want to achieve with a catalogue. Here is some intel on how good cognitive bias lists are built and how to select one that’s good for you.

Let’s Take a Look at Two Cognitive Bias Catalogues

One way to understand how cognitive bias lists are built is by looking at what those who build one tell you about their methodology. For instance, Soprano et al. (2024) conducted a review of relevant literature from which they manually derived a list of 221 cognitive biases that might affect humans when analyzing the accuracy of information. More specifically, what they did was to systematically look in the literature for cognitive biases, using sources such as Wikipedia, a research firm called The Decision Lab, and prior academic work.

They then searched for supporting studies on each bias using six academic databases (Google Scholar, Scopus, PubMed, Wiley, ACL Anthology, and DBLP), using each bias name as their search query. From there, two researchers independently went through all 221 biases and judged which ones could realistically show up during fact-checking, backed by examples; they then compared notes, resolved disagreements, and a third researcher reviewed the final agreed-upon list. The result was a narrowed-down set of 39 biases most relevant to fact-checking, which were then categorized and paired with 11 practical countermeasures to help reduce their influence.

So, in this case, the final list was 39 because what they were looking for were biases that are likely to come up during fact-checking. Is the final list they came up with a good one? Well…only sort of. The problem is that deciding which of the 221 biases apply to fact-checking was subjective because it relied on the researchers’ imagining a plausible scenario. For 16 of the 39 final biases, they couldn’t find any direct fact-checking literature to back them up, meaning those inclusions were essentially educated guesses. The study was also entirely theoretical, as no experiments were run, no fact-checkers were observed, and no data was collected, so there’s no empirical proof that these biases actually manifest in practice.

If 221 sounds like too much, perhaps you’ll be more comfortable with the Cognitive Bias Codex/Buster Benson dataset, which contains only 188 bias names. The story of this catalogue goes as follows: Buster Benson spent years referencing Wikipedia’s list of cognitive biases and found it a useful but tangled reference. His goal was essentially to reorganize and make sense of what Wikipedia had already compiled, not to conduct original research. The codex, visualized with John Manoogian III, arranges biases in a radial circle divided into four quadrants, grouping them by the type of cognitive problem they represent.

Is the Cognitive Bias Codex useful? Yes, it often is. It can be used as a navigational and educational tool. Its four-category framework (too much information, not enough meaning, need to act fast, what to remember) gives you an intuitive mental model for why biases exist at all. It’s also the case that many of these biases are confirmed by reproducible research.

Is the Cognitive Bias Codex a fully reliable list of biases? No. This catalogue was created based on a Wikipedia list, which is not an academic source, though its level of reliability is relatively high. Moreover, some entries (e.g., confirmation bias and anchoring) are backed by decades of research, while others are ‘validated’ by a single study or a limited cultural context. Visually, all of the items in the Codex appear equal in terms of authority.

Wondering what happens if we combine the two lists?

List of 251 Cognitive Biases and Their Definitions

Here’s a table listing the cognitive biases (and their definitions) included in one or both of the lists (i.e., the one from Soprano et al. and the one from the Cognitive Bias Codex). Note that differences in how the two lists named/defined specific biases may have affected the extent to which the comparison between the two catalogues is accurate.

Item NumberBias NameDefinitionAppears in Both Catalogues?
#1Absent-mindednessForgetfulness that happens because your attention was elsewhere at the moment you needed the information.No
#2Action BiasA preference for doing something (any action) over doing nothing, even when inaction would be wiser.No
#3Actor-observer BiasA tendency to explain other people’s actions as personality-driven while explaining our own actions as situation-driven.Yes
#4Additive BiasA tendency to solve problems by adding features, steps, or resources instead of considering what to remove.No
#5Affect HeuristicUsing your immediate feelings (like/dislike, fear/comfort) as a shortcut for judging risks and benefits.No
#6Agent Detection BiasA tendency to see intentional agents or purposeful causes behind events that may be random or natural.No
#7Ambiguity EffectA tendency to avoid choices when the odds are unclear, even if the expected payoff could be good.Yes
#8Anchoring EffectLetting the first number or piece of information you hear overly shape your later estimates or decisions.Yes
#9Anecdotal fallacyTreating a vivid personal story as decisive evidence, while downplaying broader data or statistics.No
#10Anthropocentric ThinkingA habit of interpreting the world as centered on humans, overgeneralizing human needs or traits as the default.No
#11AnthropomorphismAttributing human emotions, intentions, or personalities to animals, objects, or systems that don’t have them.Yes
#12ApopheniaSeeing meaningful patterns or connections in random or unrelated information.No
#13Appeal to noveltyA fallacy that assumes something is better or true simply because it is new.No
#14Appeal to probability fallacyA fallacy that treats something as true just because it might be true or seems likely to be true.No
#15Argument from fallacyA fallacy that concludes a claim must be false (or true) just because a particular argument for (or against) it is flawed.No
#16Association FallacyJudging a person, idea, or claim based on what it is associated with rather than on its own merits.No
#17Assumed Similarity BiasAssuming other people think, feel, or behave more like you than they actually do.No
#18Attentional BiasA tendency for attention to get pulled toward certain cues (e.g., threat, novelty), shaping what you notice and remember.Yes
#19Attribute SubstitutionAnswering a hard question by unconsciously swapping in an easier, related question.No
#20Attribution BiasRecurring mistakes in how we assign causes to events or behavior (e.g., over-crediting traits or under-crediting situations).No
#21Authority BiasGiving undue weight to an authority figure’s opinion, regardless of the evidence.Yes
#22Automation BiasOver-trusting automated recommendations and overlooking signs that the system may be wrong.Yes
#23Availability BiasOverestimating how common or likely something is because examples come to mind easily.No
#24Availability CascadeA belief seems truer as it becomes more talked about and repeated in public conversation.No
#25Availability HeuristicEstimating frequency or probability by how easily you can recall examples, rather than by the real base rate.Yes
#26Backfire EffectCorrections or counterevidence can sometimes make a mistaken belief feel even more certain.Yes
#27Bandwagon EffectAdopting beliefs or behaviors mainly because many other people appear to hold them.Yes
#28Barnum Effect (or Forer Effect)Accepting a vague, general personality description as uniquely accurate for you.Yes
#29Base Rate FallacyIgnoring how common something is in the population (the base rate) when judging how likely it is in a specific case.Yes
#30Belief BiasJudging an argument by whether you like its conclusion rather than by whether the reasoning is valid.Yes
#31Ben Franklin EffectTending to like someone more after you’ve done them a favor, because you infer they must be worth helping.No
#32Berkson’s ParadoxA selection effect where choosing participants based on certain traits creates a misleading relationship between those traits.No
#33Bias blind SpotSpotting biases in other people more readily than in yourself.Yes
#34Bizarreness EffectUnusual or bizarre details are more memorable than ordinary ones.Yes
#35Boundary ExtensionRemembering a scene as extending beyond what you actually saw, as if your mind ‘zoomed out’ in memory.No
#36Cheerleader EffectPeople can seem more attractive when seen as part of a group than when seen alone.Yes
#37Childhood AmnesiaThe common inability to recall events from the earliest years of childhood.No
#38Choice-supportive BiasRemembering your past choices as smarter than they were, and recalling rejected options as worse than they were.Yes
#39Clustering illusionSeeing ‘streaks’ or clusters in random data and assuming they must be meaningful.No
#40Cognitive DissonanceThe discomfort of holding conflicting beliefs or acting against your values, often followed by rationalizing to reduce tension.No
#41Commission BiasA preference for errors of action over errors of inaction, often driven by fear of regret for not acting.No
#42Compassion FadeFeeling less empathy as the number of people in need grows, even when the total suffering is larger.No
#43ConfabulationFilling gaps in memory with a plausible story, without realizing the details are invented.No
#44Confirmation BiasFavoring information that supports what you already believe and discounting what challenges it.Yes
#45ConformityAdjusting your views or behavior to match a group’s norms or expectations.No
#46Congruence BiasTesting ideas mainly by looking for confirming evidence instead of trying to disprove them.Yes
#47Conjunction Fallacy (or Linda Problem)Mistakenly believing a specific combined scenario is more likely than a broader, more general scenario.Yes
#48Conservatism Bias (or Regressive Bias)Updating beliefs too slowly when given new evidence, so initial beliefs remain overly influential.Yes
#49Consistency BiasMisremembering your past attitudes and choices as more stable and consistent than they really were.Yes
#50Context EffectYour preference changes depending on the surrounding options, comparisons, or how a choice set is constructed.Yes
#51Continued Influence EffectEven after a claim is corrected, it can keep influencing judgments because the original misinformation sticks.Yes
#52Contrast EffectJudging something based on how it compares to what you just experienced, rather than on its absolute value.Yes
#53Courtesy BiasGiving answers you think are polite or expected, rather than what you truly think or experienced.No
#54Cross-race EffectBeing better at recognizing and distinguishing faces from your own racial group than from other groups.Yes
#55CryptomnesiaA memory error where you remember an idea but forget where it came from, so it feels like your own original thought.Yes
#56Cue-dependent forgettingRecalling information better when the cues at retrieval match the cues present when you learned it.No
#57Curse of KnowledgeStruggling to imagine what it’s like not to know something you know, which leads to explanations that are too advanced.Yes
#58DeclinismA tendency to believe society or the world is in decline compared with an idealized past.Yes
#59Decoy EffectAdding a clearly inferior ‘decoy’ option can shift preference between two main options.Yes
#60Default EffectA tendency to stick with the pre-selected option, even when an alternative might be better.No
#61Defensive Attribution HypothesisAssigning blame in a way that protects you emotionally—often blaming more when you could picture yourself as the victim.Yes
#62Delmore effectSpending more time and detail on low-priority plans than high-priority ones, even when the stakes are reversed.No
#63Denomination EffectSpending money more freely when it is broken into smaller denominations than when it is one larger bill.Yes
#64Disposition EffectIn investing, selling assets that went up too early and holding assets that went down too long.Yes
#65Distinction BiasPerceiving options as more different when you compare them side-by-side than when you evaluate them one at a time.Yes
#66Dread AversionA tendency to avoid or overreact to options that evoke dread, because anticipated pain looms larger than anticipated pleasure.No
#67Dunning-Kruger EffectPeople with low skill often overrate their ability, while people with high skill may underrate theirs.Yes
#68Duration NeglectJudging an experience by its most intense and final moments while largely ignoring how long it lasted.Yes
#69Effort JustificationValuing an outcome more because you worked hard for it, which helps justify the effort you spent.Yes
#70Egocentric BiasOver-focusing on yourself—such as overestimating your role in outcomes or how much others notice you.Yes
#71End-of-history IllusionBelieving you will change very little in the future, even though your past self has changed a lot over time.No
#72Endowment EffectValuing something more simply because you own it.Yes
#73Escalation of Commitment (or Irrational Escalation, or Sunk Cost Fallacy)Continuing to invest time, money, or effort in a failing course of action because you’ve already invested so much.Yes
#74EssentialismAssuming categories (like ‘genius’ or ‘criminal’) have an underlying essence that makes members what they are.No
#75Euphoric RecallRemembering a past experience as more positive than it actually was at the time.No
#76Exaggerated ExpectationExpecting outcomes to be more extreme than they usually are, so reality feels milder than your prediction.No
#77Experimenter’s Bias (or Expectation Bias)Research results can be skewed because the experimenter’s expectations subtly influence methods, participants, or interpretation.Yes
#78Extension NeglectFailing to adequately consider the size or extent of something (how many, how much) when evaluating its importance or value.No
#79Extrinsic Incentives BiasOver- or misjudging how external rewards and incentives affect motivation, especially when interpreting other people’s behavior.Yes
#80Fading Affect BiasIn memory, negative feelings fade faster than positive ones, making the past seem nicer over time.Yes
#81Fallacy of CompositionA fallacy that assumes what is true of the parts must be true of the whole.No
#82Fallacy of DivisionA fallacy that assumes what is true of the whole must be true of each part.No
#83False Consensus EffectOverestimating how many other people share your opinions, habits, or preferences.Yes
#84False MemoryRemembering events that didn’t happen, or recalling real events in a distorted way.Yes
#85False Uniqueness BiasUnderestimating how common your positive traits or good behaviors are, so you feel unusually unique.No
#86Focusing effectOverweighting one standout factor when predicting outcomes like happiness, satisfaction, or success.No
#87Form Function Attribution BiasAssuming an object’s form implies its intended function or meaning beyond the evidence you actually have.No
#88Framing Effect (or Frequency Illusion, or Baader-Meinhof Phenomenon)After you notice something once, you start seeing it everywhere and mistakenly think it has suddenly become much more common.Yes
#89Functional fixednessDifficulty seeing alternative uses for an object beyond its typical or ‘intended’ purpose.No
#90Fundamental Attribution ErrorExplaining others’ behavior as personality-driven while underestimating situational forces affecting them.Yes
#91Gambler’s FallacyBelieving a random process should ‘even out’ soon, so a streak makes the opposite outcome feel due.Yes
#92Gender BiasLetting gender stereotypes shape expectations, judgments, or decisions about people’s abilities or roles.No
#93Generation Effect (or Self-generation Effect)Remembering information better when you generate or produce it yourself rather than just reading it.Yes
#94Google EffectForgetting information more readily when you expect you can easily look it up later (e.g., online).Yes
#95Group Attribution ErrorAttributing a person’s behavior to their group (or a group’s behavior to its members) in an overly simplistic way.Yes
#96GroupshiftGroups tend to make decisions that are more extreme than the average of members’ initial positions.No
#97GroupthinkA group’s desire for harmony can suppress dissent and critical thinking, leading to poor decisions.No
#98Halo EffectLetting an overall impression of someone (good or bad) color judgments about their specific traits.Yes
#99Hard-easy EffectBeing underconfident on easy tasks and overconfident on hard tasks.Yes
#100Hindsight BiasAfter you know the outcome, it feels like you ‘knew it all along’ and the result seems more predictable than it was.Yes
#101Hostile Attribution BiasInterpreting ambiguous actions by others as intentionally hostile.No
#102Hot-cold Empathy GapUnderestimating how much ‘hot’ states (hunger, pain, anger, arousal) change choices compared with ‘cool’ states.Yes
#103Hot-hand FallacyBelieving a streak of successes means a person has a ‘hot hand’ and is more likely to keep succeeding, beyond chance.Yes
#104Humor EffectHumorous material is more memorable than similar non-humorous material.Yes
#105Hyperbolic DiscountingStrongly preferring smaller-sooner rewards over larger-later rewards, more than a consistent discount rate would predict.Yes
#106Identifiable victim effectFeeling more compelled to help a single named or pictured person than an anonymous group with the same need.No
#107IKEA EffectValuing things more because you helped create or assemble them.Yes
#108Illicit TransferenceA logic error where you treat properties of a word or label as if they were properties of the thing it refers to.No
#109Illusion of Asymmetric InsightBelieving you understand other people better than they understand you.Yes
#110Illusion of ControlOverestimating how much control you have over outcomes that are largely influenced by chance or external factors.Yes
#111Illusion of Explanatory DepthThinking you understand how something works in detail until you try to explain it and discover the gaps.No
#112Illusion of external agencyAttributing your own preferences or choices to an outside force or agent rather than to your own mind.No
#113Illusion of TransparencyOverestimating how much your feelings or intentions ‘leak out’ and are obvious to other people.Yes
#114Illusion of ValidityFeeling overly confident in a judgment because the story seems coherent, even if the evidence is weak.Yes
#115Illusory CorrelationSeeing a relationship between two things when the pattern is coincidental or driven by a third factor.Yes
#116Illusory SuperiorityRating yourself as better than average on positive traits or abilities.Yes
#117Illusory Truth EffectRepeated statements feel truer, even when the content is false.Yes
#118Impact BiasOverestimating how strongly and how long future events will affect your emotions.Yes
#119Implicit associationsUnconscious mental links between concepts that shape perception and judgment without deliberate intent.No
#120Implicit BiasAutomatic, unconscious attitudes or stereotypes that can influence behavior and decisions.No
#121Implicit stereotypesUnconscious stereotypes that shape what you expect from people in different groups.No
#122Information BiasSeeking additional information even when it won’t change the decision you can make.Yes
#123Ingroup BiasFavoring people seen as part of your own group over outsiders.Yes
#124Insensitivity To Sample SizeDrawing strong conclusions from small samples, as if they were as informative as large samples.Yes
#125Intentionality BiasAssuming outcomes or behaviors are intentional when they may be accidental or random.No
#126Interoceptive Bias (or Hungry Judge Effect)Your judgments are swayed by internal bodily states like hunger, fatigue, or stress.No
#127Just-world HypothesisBelieving the world is fair, so good things happen to good people and bad outcomes must be deserved.Yes
#128Lag EffectMemory improves when repetitions are spaced out over time rather than packed together without gaps.No
#129Less-is-better EffectPreferring a smaller quantity when judged alone, even if you’d prefer the larger quantity when compared directly.Yes
#130Leveling And SharpeningMemory tends to drop some details (‘leveling’) while exaggerating or highlighting others (‘sharpening’).Yes
#131Levels-of-processing EffectInformation processed more deeply (by meaning) is remembered better than information processed superficially (by appearance).Yes
#132List-length EffectAs lists get longer, people tend to recall a smaller proportion and struggle more to retrieve specific items.Yes
#133Logical FallacyA general term for a common error in reasoning that makes an argument unreliable or invalid.No
#134Loss AversionLosses typically feel more painful than equally sized gains feel pleasurable.Yes
#135Magic number 7+-2A rough limit on how many items we can hold in working memory at once (often around 7, give or take).No
#136Masked man fallacyA mistake about identity and belief: knowing ‘X’ doesn’t imply knowing ‘X’ under a different description, even if they’re the same thing.No
#137Memory InhibitionDifficulty recalling certain memories because other thoughts or retrieval attempts actively block them.Yes
#138Mental accountingMentally separating money into ‘buckets’ so identical dollars are treated differently depending on their label or source.No
#139Mere Exposure Effect (or Familiarity Principle)Repeated exposure to something tends to increase familiarity and liking for it.Yes
#140MisattributionAssigning a memory, feeling, or idea to the wrong source—such as thinking you learned it somewhere else.Yes
#141Misinformation effectLater misleading information can alter your memory of what actually happened.No
#142Modality EffectItems presented by sound are often recalled better than visually presented items, especially near the end of a list.Yes
#143Money IllusionFocusing on nominal amounts of money and neglecting purchasing power changes like inflation.Yes
#144Mood-congruent Memory BiasBeing more likely to remember information that matches your current mood.Yes
#145Moral Credential EffectPast good deeds can make people feel licensed to behave less ethically afterward.Yes
#146Moral LuckJudging the morality of someone’s choice by how it turned out, even when the outcome depended on luck.Yes
#147Murphy’s LawA tendency to expect that things will go wrong, especially when you’re primed to look for problems.No
#148Naïve CynicismAssuming other people are more selfish or self-interested than they really are.Yes
#149Naïve RealismBelieving you see the world objectively, and if others disagree they must be uninformed or biased.Yes
#150Negativity BiasNegative experiences and information tend to have a stronger impact than positive ones.Yes
#151Neglect of ProbabilityIgnoring probability and focusing on the possibility or vividness of outcomes when judging risk.Yes
#152Next-in-line EffectForgetting your turn when it’s time to speak because you were focused on preparing what you would say.Yes
#153Non-adaptive Choice SwitchingSwitching choices after a negative outcome even when the underlying odds haven’t changed, which can hurt performance.No
#154Normalcy BiasAssuming things will continue as normal, so you underestimate the likelihood or impact of a disaster.Yes
#155Not Invented Here SyndromeRejecting ideas or products primarily because they come from outside your group or organization.Yes
#156Objectivity IllusionBelieving your judgments are purely objective while others’ judgments are biased by perspective.No
#157Observer effectChanges in behavior that occur because people know they’re being watched, measured, or studied.No
#158Observer-expectancy EffectAn experimenter’s expectations influence what participants do or what observers record, shaping the results.Yes
#159Occam’s razorA rule of thumb that, all else equal, simpler explanations are preferable to more complicated ones.No
#160Omission BiasJudging harmful actions as worse than equally harmful inaction, often because omissions feel less blameworthy.Yes
#161Optimism BiasBelieving good outcomes are more likely for you than for other people in similar situations.Yes
#162Ostrich Effect (or Ostrich Problem)A tendency to avoid or ignore negative information so you don’t have to face it.Yes
#163Outcome BiasJudging a decision mainly by how it ended up, not by how reasonable it was given what was known at the time.Yes
#164Outgroup Homogeneity BiasPerceiving members of an outgroup as all basically similar, while seeing more diversity within your own group.Yes
#165Overconfidence EffectBeing more confident in your answers or predictions than your accuracy justifies.Yes
#166PareidoliaSeeing faces or meaningful images in random patterns (like clouds or noise).No
#167Parkinson’s Law of TrivialitySpending disproportionate time and attention on trivial issues while neglecting bigger, more important ones.Yes
#168Part-list Cueing EffectProviding some items from a list as ‘help’ can actually make it harder to recall the remaining unseen items.Yes
#169Peak-end RuleRemembering an experience mostly by its peak intensity and how it ended, rather than by the overall average.Yes
#170Perky EffectVivid mental imagery can spill into perception so that imagined details feel like they were actually seen.No
#171Pessimism BiasExpecting negative outcomes to happen more often than they do, and underestimating positive possibilities.Yes
#172Picture Superiority EffectPictures tend to be remembered more easily than the same information presented as words.Yes
#173Placebo effectExperiencing real changes (or perceived improvement) because you believe a treatment will help.No
#174Placement BiasPreferences can shift simply because an option appears earlier, later, higher, or more prominently in a list or layout.No
#175Plan Continuation BiasSticking with a plan even when new information suggests it’s no longer appropriate or safe.No
#176Planning FallacyUnderestimating how long tasks will take and overestimating how smoothly they will go.Yes
#177Plant BlindnessOverlooking plants in your environment and underestimating their importance compared with animals or objects.No
#178Positivity Effect (or Socioemotional Electivity Theory)As people age, they often remember and attend to positive information more than negative information.Yes
#179PrejudiceHolding negative judgments about groups or individuals in advance, often based on stereotypes rather than evidence.No
#180Present BiasGiving much more weight to immediate rewards or costs than to future ones, even when the future matters more.No
#181Prevention BiasPreferring to prevent harms rather than provide help after harms occur, even when outcomes would be equivalent.No
#182Primacy EffectBetter recall for items that appear at the beginning of a sequence.Yes
#183Pro-innovation BiasAssuming innovations are inherently beneficial and discounting risks, trade-offs, or unintended consequences.Yes
#184Probability MatchingChoosing options in proportion to their success rates instead of consistently choosing the best-probability option.No
#185Processing Difficulty EffectWhen something is harder to read or process, it can prompt deeper thinking (or sometimes stronger memory) than fluent information.Yes
#186Projection BiasAssuming your future preferences and feelings will match your current ones, even when circumstances will differ.Yes
#187Proportionality BiasBelieving big events must have big, intentional causes, rather than accepting small or chance causes.No
#188Prospect TheoryA framework describing how people evaluate gains and losses relative to a reference point, with losses typically weighing more than gains.No
#189Pseudocertainty EffectPreferring ‘sure’ outcomes in a sub-stage of a decision, even when the overall probabilities don’t justify the preference.Yes
#190Puritanical BiasA bias toward valuing self-control and judging indulgence harshly, which can skew moral and practical judgments.No
#191Pygmalion EffectHigher expectations from others can lead to better performance, partly because those expectations change treatment and effort.No
#192Reactance TheoryA tendency to resist perceived threats to freedom by doing the opposite of what is being pressured or demanded.Yes
#193Reactive DevaluationDiscounting a proposal or concession because it comes from an opponent, even if it would otherwise seem reasonable.Yes
#194Recency EffectBetter recall for the most recent items in a sequence.Yes
#195Recency IllusionAfter learning something, you mistakenly think it’s new or that people are suddenly talking about it more than before.Yes
#196Reminiscence BumpAdults tend to have a cluster of vivid memories from adolescence and early adulthood compared with other life periods.No
#197Repetition BlindnessFailing to notice repetitions when the same word or object appears twice close together in time.No
#198Restraint BiasOverestimating your ability to resist temptation, so you take on situations that require more self-control than you have.Yes
#199Reverse psychologyTrying to influence someone by advocating the opposite of what you actually want them to do.No
#200Rhyme As Reason EffectRhyming phrases often feel more convincing or ‘true’ than equivalent non-rhyming phrases.Yes
#201Risk Compensation (or Peltzman Effect)Taking bigger risks when safety measures are present because you feel more protected.Yes
#202Rosy RetrospectionRemembering the past as better than it was, especially compared with the present.Yes
#203Salience BiasPaying disproportionate attention to what is vivid, prominent, or emotionally striking, while neglecting less noticeable information.No
#204Saying Is Believing EffectAfter you state or explain something, you become more likely to believe it and remember it in a way consistent with what you said.No
#205Scope NeglectFailing to adjust your judgments for the scale of a problem, so large and small harms can feel oddly similar in value.No
#206Selection BiasDrawing conclusions from a non-representative sample because the way you selected observations was skewed.No
#207Selective perceptionNoticing and interpreting information that fits your expectations while filtering out what doesn’t.No
#208Self-relevance EffectInformation linked to your self-concept is remembered better than similar information about others.Yes
#209Self-serving BiasTaking credit for successes and blaming failures on circumstances, luck, or other people.Yes
#210Semmelweis ReflexRejecting new evidence or ideas mainly because they conflict with an established belief or practice.Yes
#211Serial Position EffectMemory is best for items at the beginning and end of a list, with the middle remembered worst.Yes
#212Serial recall effectThe tendency for recall to follow the original order of information, especially in short-term memory tasks.No
#213Sexual Overperception BiasOverinterpreting friendliness or ambiguity as sexual interest, often more commonly reported by men judging women.No
#214Shared Information BiasIn group discussions, people tend to focus on information everyone already knows and ignore unique information held by individuals.No
#215Social Comparison BiasFavoring options or candidates who don’t threaten your own strengths, status, or self-image.Yes
#216Social CryptomnesiaMisremembering who originally contributed an idea in a group, so the true source gets blurred or reassigned.No
#217Social Desirability BiasAnswering in a way that looks socially acceptable, leading to overreporting ‘good’ behavior and underreporting ‘bad’ behavior.Yes
#218Source ConfusionMixing up where you learned something, so you attribute a memory to the wrong source.Yes
#219Spacing EffectSpacing study or practice over time improves long-term learning compared with cramming.Yes
#220Spotlight EffectOverestimating how much other people notice your appearance, actions, or mistakes.Yes
#221Status Quo BiasPreferring things to stay the same and resisting change, even when change could be beneficial.Yes
#222Stereotypical Bias (or Stereotype Bias)Letting stereotypes drive judgments about individuals, often by overgeneralizing group traits.Yes
#223Stereotyping Subadditivity EffectAssigning probabilities to subcategories in a way that makes the parts add up to more than the whole should allow.No
#224Subadditivity effectAssigning higher combined probability to detailed parts than to the overall category, violating basic probability logic.No
#225Subjective ValidationAccepting a claim because it feels personally fitting or emotionally resonant, not because it is well supported.Yes
#226Suffix EffectRecall of the last item worsens when another irrelevant item immediately follows it.Yes
#227SuggestibilityHaving memories and beliefs shaped by leading questions, hints, or social pressure.No
#228SurrogationMistaking a representation or model of something for the real thing, and drawing conclusions as if the model were reality.No
#229Survivorship BiasFocusing on visible successes and missing the invisible failures that dropped out along the way.Yes
#230System JustificationDefending and rationalizing existing social or political arrangements, even when they disadvantage you or your group.Yes
#231Systematic BiasA consistent, directional error in judgment or measurement that reliably pushes results away from the truth.No
#232TachypsychiaA warped sense of time (often feeling slowed down or sped up) during trauma, drugs, or extreme stress.No
#233Telescoping EffectMisplacing events in time—remembering recent events as longer ago and distant events as more recent than they were.Yes
#234Testing EffectRetrieving information through testing strengthens memory more than simply reviewing the same material.Yes
#235Third-person EffectBelieving media or messages influence other people more than they influence you.Yes
#236Time-saving BiasMiscalculating time saved by changing speed—overvaluing speed changes at high speeds and undervaluing them at low speeds.Yes
#237Tip-of-the-Tongue PhenomenonKnowing a word but being unable to retrieve it in the moment, often while feeling it’s ‘right there’.Yes
#238Trait Ascription BiasSeeing yourself as flexible and changeable but viewing other people as having more fixed traits.Yes
#239Travis SyndromeOverestimating the significance or urgency of the present moment compared with the past or future.No
#240Truth BiasA tendency to default to believing what you’re told, which makes lies and errors harder to detect.No
#241Ultimate Attribution ErrorExplaining outgroup behavior in a biased way—crediting their good actions to luck or situation while blaming their bad actions on character (and doing the opposite for your ingroup).Yes
#242Unconscious Bias (or Implicit Bias)Automatic, unintentional bias that influences judgment and behavior without conscious awareness.No
#243Unit BiasTreating one ‘unit’ (one serving, one item, one package) as the proper amount and consuming it regardless of actual need.Yes
#244Verbatim EffectRemembering the gist of what was said better than the exact words, which can change details over time.No
#245Von Restorff EffectA distinct or standout item is remembered better than similar items around it.Yes
#246Weber-Fechner LawA principle that perceived intensity grows with relative change, so equal physical changes don’t feel equally large.Yes
#247Well Traveled Road EffectPreferring familiar options and routes simply because they are familiar, even without evidence they are better.Yes
#248Women Are Wonderful EffectA stereotype that attributes more positive traits to women than to men in general.No
#249Worse-than-average EffectBelieving you are worse than average at simple tasks because you assume others find them easier than you do.No
#250Zero-risk BiasPreferring to eliminate a small risk completely rather than reduce a larger risk by a bigger amount that still leaves some risk.Yes
#251Zero-sum BiasAssuming situations are zero-sum, so one person’s gain must come at another person’s loss even when resources aren’t fixed.Yes

Why Don’t We Have A Single, Universally Accepted List of Cognitive Biases?

There are several reasons that can explain why different bias catalogues tell us different things. For instance, bias names may occasionally work as umbrella terms as opposed to well-delimited constructs, making it unclear what counts as replication of the same bias. In other words, researchers might study slightly different things but call them by the same name, or study the same pattern but give it a different label, making it hard to know what truly counts as a replication. For example, “confirmation bias” can refer to selectively searching for supportive evidence, interpreting neutral information as supportive, or remembering confirming facts better—all related, but not identical, behaviors. So when one study claims to replicate “confirmation bias,” it may not be testing exactly the same thing another study did, which creates confusion in bias catalogues.

In some cases, catalogues may contain several entries that represent the same thing under different names. Sometimes two labels are true synonyms, and other times they’re near-synonyms with only tiny, subtle differences. For example, one catalogue might split “overconfidence” into several named sub-biases (overestimation, overprecision, better-than-average), while another treats them as one family.

Even when everyone agrees on the general concept, studies may measure it in different ways, and that can change the size of the effect or when it shows up. In framing research, for instance, “the same bias” can look stronger or weaker depending on how the choices are written, what the stakes are, or whether it’s a between-person vs within-person design. For example, when studying something known as the illusion of control bias, one study might measure it as “how much control do you feel you have?” while another measures “do you bet more when you think you have control?” The results obtained from these two approaches may be different.

Bias literatures can also get distorted by publication bias and researcher degrees of freedom; studies with exciting results get published more often, and small choices in analysis (which outcomes to report, when to stop collecting data, which variables to include, etc.) can accidentally make weak effects look real.

Finally, replication and generalizability are real constraints: when large replication projects rerun classic effects, the replicated effects are often smaller, and sometimes they don’t hit the usual “statistically significant” threshold, especially if the original finding was overestimated. And even if an effect replicates, it might be very context-sensitive: a bias seen in US undergraduates in a lab might look different in professionals making real decisions under time pressure.

Bottom Line: A Good List Contains the Cognitive Biases You Care About

We don’t currently have a single catalogue of cognitive biases we can rely on, regardless of the circumstance. Existing lists are, nevertheless, quite useful when our goal is to find biases that might affect us or that we want to further investigate.

To be more specific, you may consider doing things as follows: If you suspect biases might be significantly affecting your personal life, your organization, or your research study, perhaps it’s time to take a good look at some bias constructs to get a better sense of which biases might be responsible for your problems. Then, as a next step, do a bit of research to assess to what extent the biases in question are understood in the scientific literature (e.g., what cognitions and behaviors are thought to underlie the biases in question, and what kind of consequences correlating with the cognitions and behaviors in question are to be expected). Then, if you are quite sure the biases in question are to be taken seriously in your situation, find out more about ways to mitigate their unwanted effects, both generally speaking and bias-specific speaking.

Sources

Benson, B. (2016). Cognitive bias cheat sheet dataset [Data set]. GitHub. Link.

Soprano, M., Roitero, K., La Barbera, D., Ceolin, D., Spina, D., Demartini, G., & Mizzaro, S. (2024). Cognitive biases in fact-checking and their countermeasures: A review. Information Processing & Management61(3), 103672. Link.

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