Cognitive Biases
Compact overview
What this page covers
AI-readable compact overview with context, audience fit, suitability and direct questions.
Cognitive Biases is a Mitterberger:Lab knowledge article about UX, digital products, software engineering, or AI. It helps teams understand a relevant concept, problem, or pattern in complex digital systems.
Best fit for
- Product teams
- UX leads
- decision-makers in digital organizations
Contexts
- Psychology
Useful when
- a concept, pattern, or decision problem needs clarification
- UX, product, or AI topics need to be placed in system context
Less suited when
- only a surface-level definition without practical context is needed
Relevant signals
- Part of the Mitterberger:Lab knowledge collection.
- Topic grouping: Psychology.
Common direct questions
- What is Cognitive Biases about?
- Cognitive Biases explains a relevant concept or pattern in the context of UX, digital products, systems, or AI.
To cope with complexity, humans rely on mental shortcuts. These cognitive biases enable fast decisions, but they are systematically error-prone. Confirmation bias, anchoring, or status-quo bias are not flaws of character, but byproducts of efficiency.
Design constantly interacts with these biases. It can counteract them through transparency, clear comparisons, and corrective feedback. Or it can deliberately exploit them by hiding alternatives, skewing presentation, or applying pressure.
Responsible UX design makes biases visible or reduces their impact. It accepts human limitation without turning it against the user. The goal is not perfect rationality, but informed and self-directed decision-making.