In my last two entries on this site, I discussed biases and heuristics. I wrote about them separately because I had plenty to say about both, which, for anyone who knows me, is not a surprise. What I ...
In my last two entries on this site, I discussed biases and heuristics. I wrote about them separately because I had plenty to say about both, which, for anyone who knows me, is not a surprise. What I ...
Cognitive shortcuts (or heuristics) and their consequent psychological and behavioural biases can profoundly affect and shape the judgments and decisions we make in our everyday and professional lives ...
image: The Gerontological Society of America -- the nation's largest interdisciplinary organization devoted to the field of aging -- has expanded its Communicating with Older Adults publication series ...
This Article seeks to improve our understanding of the strategies judges use to deal with conflicting expert evidence. In contrast to the paradigm of the Herculean judge, the Article hypothesizes that ...
In a world where things move a mile a minute, our brains are often tasked with processing large amounts of information within limited windows of time. When work requires that we multitask, under ...
If you enjoyed these tips and tactics, learn more about what's coming next in our industry at the Virtual Financial Advisor Summit. Research shows that 27 percent of adult Americans would need to ...
Explainable AI (XAI) is essential for gaining executive trust in data-driven recommendations. Many high-performing AI models operate as black boxes, making their predictions difficult to interpret.
If a prior patient had complications in one childbirth delivery mode, a physician may be more likely to switch to the other—and likely inappropriate—delivery mode for the subsequent patient, a new ...