This document discusses cognitive biases and how design thinking can be used to address them. It provides examples of cognitive biases like survivorship bias and confirmation bias that can negatively impact decisions. However, it notes that biases are difficult to overcome as most cognition occurs subconsciously. The document advocates using choice architecture and design to structure decisions in a way that mitigates harmful biases or leverages biases for good outcomes. Specific techniques discussed include blind resumes, simplifying language for readability, and evidentiality markings. The goal is to apply understanding of cognitive biases to product design and content strategy in order to make decisions and choices that are in the user's best interests.
Related topics: