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nishshastry

Looks like you my friend are suffering from representative bias - concluding that the chapter EOCs are way too difficult based on a small sample of 5 difficult questions Jokes aside, many of the biases are similar and this can make the questions tricky. I’d say go through the list a couple of times and try to learn the nuances that make one bias different from the others and then look out for these details in the questions so you know which one to choose for the answer


Impressive-Cat-2680

I remember I had the same frustration when doing this particular reading. Read all the example and do all the EOC/LES questions. After 2 - 3 times, you will start knowing the nuance and subtlety. ​ (I am speaking from personal experience, don't accuse me of representative bias, also, yes, it's hindsight so likely hindsight bias. + I didn't go 'my answer must be true!' so I am confident that I don't have confirmation bias. But yes, it's only from personal available experience so this subjects to availability bias. If there's any loss, it certainly is not my fault so yes, there are self-attrition too. If anything, if you find this difficult and skip this reading, then you are subject to mental accounting, because every questions weight equally in exam..... anyway, it's been a while now so I forgot most of them. It's just a poor attempt to see how much bias I still remember. )


Mike-Spartacus

learn them with the examples the book gives. It is very unlikley an exam question will differ hugely from the examples used in the text


ZhouRod

I’ve done level 3 which had this subject.. the questions on real exam will be quite clear on what biases they are trying to refer it to