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Ursus marijanus
It does not. Where the biasing idea comes from isn't important.Confirmation bias involves an active pursuit for truth/accuracy.
I see zero logical difference. The relevant train of reason exists equally in both cases: whether the idea was arrived at by cogitation or a more immediate perception/cognition couple ... they are both post hoc.So, if we already thought that there was a killer outside, the noise could serve to confirm our idea. However, in my example the noise itself gave rise to the idea.
Why does what the "primer" was have any outcome on the reason tree or flow chart?We were biased in our idea, but it wasn't confirmation bias. It was representative bias, which is a result of being primed by the horror movie. This is known as the availability heuristic, which is what I was looking for.
No. It would not. If A then 7 does not allow "so then: if 7 then A". I am confused by what looks like verbal sophistry, something I don't remember you willingly engaging in. I am seeing you apply a confirmation bias in your explanations."The availability heuristic is a mental shortcut that relies on immediate examples that come to a given person's mind when evaluating a specific topic, concept, method or decision." The more easily the example comes to mind, the more confident of it we tend to be.
Ah, but if the 4 had an 'A' on the other side, it would falsify the premise. You've just experienced confirmation bias.
I thus contend that the availability heuristic is an outcome-neutral antecedent of this example of confirmation bias.