Cognitive Biases of Memory

Our memory is not a perfect recording device — it constantly reconstructs reality, often introducing subtle but systematic errors. Cognitive Biases of Memory is a curated learning pack that explains how and why our recollections become distorted, unreliable, or misleading. In this pack, you’ll explore the most common memory-related cognitive biases: from Implicit association and Prejudice to Misattribution and the Spacing effect. Each concept is explained in a clear, practical way, helping you recognize these biases not only in theory, but in everyday thinking, learning, and decision-making. This pack is designed for gradual, spaced learning. Instead of overwhelming you with information, cards are delivered step by step, reinforcing understanding and long-term retention. By completing this pack, you will: - Understand why memory fails and how cognitive biases shape recall - Learn to recognize false or distorted memories - Improve learning efficiency using evidence-based memory principles - Make better decisions by reducing memory-driven errors - Develop a more critical and self-aware mindset These skills are especially valuable for learning, teaching, product design, psychology, and everyday problem-solving. You may also be interested in: Cognitive Biases of Information Overload

You can start studying this pack. You'll receive 124 messages to help you review each card multiple times, following the principles of the forgetting curve.
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Schedule daily card reviews to quickly memorize or solidify the knowledge until it becomes second nature.
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Misattribution of memory

Misattribution of memory is a cognitive bias in which a person correctly remembers information but incorrectly remembers the source of that information.

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