Intentionality bias, which is known as intention bias for short, is a bias that makes people believe that all human behavior is intentional and that unconscious...
1 KB (107 words) - 21:03, 10 November 2024
attribution bias, the tendency to interpret others' behaviors as having hostile intent, even when the behavior is ambiguous or benign. Intentionality bias, the...
110 KB (10,169 words) - 15:04, 12 June 2025
others experience disadvantage or devaluation. This bias may not necessarily stem from intentional prejudice or discrimination but rather from the adherence...
13 KB (1,457 words) - 10:08, 7 April 2025
algorithm can be described as biased.: 332 This bias may be intentional or unintentional (for example, it can come from biased data obtained from a worker...
141 KB (15,686 words) - 15:41, 31 May 2025
rotation of an object around an internal axis Spin (propaganda), an intentionally biased portrayal of something Spin, spinning or spinnin may also refer to:...
7 KB (889 words) - 16:29, 7 June 2025
On Wikipedia, ideological bias, especially in its English-language edition, has been the subject of academic analysis and public criticism of the project...
63 KB (6,259 words) - 06:02, 10 June 2025
Bias is a disproportionate weight in favor of or against an idea or thing, usually in a way that is inaccurate, closed-minded, prejudicial, or unfair....
84 KB (9,444 words) - 16:32, 17 May 2025
distribution) Neutrality (philosophy), the absence of declared or intentional bias Neutrality (psychoanalysis) Neutral level, the physical or material...
3 KB (433 words) - 05:21, 25 February 2025
discrimination, or, in the UK, positive discrimination, which suggests an intentional bias that might be legally prohibited, or otherwise unpalatable. Enhanced...
34 KB (3,169 words) - 23:18, 15 June 2025
commercial bias, temporal bias, visual bias, bad news bias, narrative bias, status quo bias, fairness bias, expediency bias, class bias and glory bias (or the...
65 KB (7,634 words) - 14:47, 31 May 2025
Racial bias in criminal news occurs when a journalist's racial biases affect their reporting. Racial biases are a form of implicit bias, which refers to...
25 KB (3,133 words) - 17:07, 25 March 2025
9924463. Peters, Uwe (2015-12-01). "Human thinking, shared intentionality, and egocentric biases". Biology & Philosophy. 31 (2): 299–312. doi:10.1007/s10539-015-9512-0...
29 KB (3,743 words) - 19:52, 26 January 2025
The history of media bias in the United States has evolved from overtly partisan newspapers in the 18th and 19th centuries to professional journalism with...
156 KB (18,985 words) - 19:35, 25 May 2025
The negativity bias, also known as the negativity effect, is a cognitive bias that, even when positive or neutral things of equal intensity occur, things...
42 KB (4,879 words) - 00:47, 25 May 2025
numbers) via a plugboard (see photo), to "eliminate any particular intentional bias in the perceptron". The connection weights are fixed, not learned....
49 KB (6,297 words) - 14:49, 21 May 2025
Implicit stereotype (redirect from Unconscious bias)
An implicit bias or implicit stereotype is the pre-reflective attribution of particular qualities by an individual to a member of some social out group...
61 KB (7,438 words) - 20:18, 1 May 2025
In statistics, the bias of an estimator (or bias function) is the difference between this estimator's expected value and the true value of the parameter...
34 KB (5,367 words) - 15:44, 15 April 2025
A status quo bias or default bias is a cognitive bias which results from a preference for the maintenance of one's existing state of affairs. The current...
43 KB (5,548 words) - 19:03, 2 June 2025
Political bias refers to the bias or manipulation of information to favor a particular political position, party, or candidate. Closely associated with...
31 KB (3,573 words) - 15:02, 9 June 2025
with first-generation bias, which is deliberate, usually involving intentional exclusion. An example of second-generation gender bias is that leaders are...
16 KB (1,890 words) - 11:44, 19 October 2024
eliminativists reject intentionality while accepting the existence of qualia. Other eliminativists reject qualia while accepting intentionality. Many philosophers...
59 KB (7,679 words) - 19:58, 24 May 2025
In psychology, an attribution bias or attributional errors is a cognitive bias that refers to the systematic errors made when people evaluate or try to...
40 KB (4,999 words) - 04:53, 2 June 2025
The bias blind spot is the cognitive bias of recognizing the impact of biases on the judgment of others, while failing to see the impact of biases on one's...
10 KB (1,223 words) - 07:51, 30 July 2024
Sunk cost (redirect from Plan continuation bias)
the information is framed. This is in contradiction to the concept of intentionality, which is concerned with whether the presentation of information changes...
39 KB (4,808 words) - 23:47, 15 June 2025
hearings on this matter, at which the networks claimed to have no intentional bias in their election night reporting. A study of the calls made on election...
171 KB (13,050 words) - 21:27, 11 June 2025
Phenomenology (philosophy) (section Intentionality)
its intentionality, it being directed towards something, as it is an experience of or about some object." Also, on this theory, every intentional act...
51 KB (5,716 words) - 23:30, 7 June 2025
Criticism of Wikipedia (redirect from Political bias of Wikipedia)
of methodical fact-checking, and its political bias. Concerns have also been raised about systemic bias along gender, racial, political, corporate, institutional...
185 KB (18,243 words) - 14:25, 8 June 2025
Decision-making (redirect from Source credibility bias)
held by the group. Source credibility bias is a tendency to reject a person's statement on the basis of a bias against the person, organization, or group...
75 KB (8,903 words) - 00:13, 4 June 2025
Dunning–Kruger effect (category Cognitive biases)
The Dunning–Kruger effect is a cognitive bias in which people with limited competence in a particular domain overestimate their abilities. It was first...
46 KB (5,167 words) - 17:37, 12 June 2025
Peak–end rule (category Cognitive biases)
the beginning and end of sequences, phenomena known as primacy bias and recency bias, respectively. A paper by Garbinsky, Morewedge, and Shiv (2014)...
30 KB (3,683 words) - 05:49, 1 June 2025