00:03
All right, we want to match the cognitive bias with the primary way in which it influences or believes.
00:09
So looking at our first option here, it says adopting the average answer in a group because that's more likely to be accurate.
00:17
That would be a case of what we call anchoring.
00:22
So this wasn't a choice provided, but it's what it would be.
00:30
So it'd be called anchoring bias.
00:36
That's our first one.
00:43
All right, second one leads people in like -minded groups to end up expressing and even adopting beliefs that are more extreme.
00:50
That is the conformity effect.
00:52
That happens to already be right beside it.
00:55
Number three involves a deliberate choice to treat other groups belief that h has evidence that h is true.
01:03
So that is going to be an example of in -group bias, which also happens to be right next to that choice.
01:10
This one says leads us to have positive beliefs about groups that we identify ourselves with...