Failure bias
Failure bias is the logical error of concentrating on the people or things that failed to make it past some selection process and overlooking those that did, typically because of their lack of visibility. This can lead to false conclusions in several different ways. It is a form of selection bias.
In several of these cases, one measure of success is precisely the lack of public awareness of people or things that are undergoing such selection process, which means that, in the possibility that there is at least one agent who is interested in the success of the people or things that are going through the selection process, the agent(s) will be interested into keeping the subject out of the public eye, and thus, to raise the likelihood of the failure bias happening
Examples
- Espionage
- Most crimes fit into this category
- Censorship
See also
- Selection bias
- Cherry picking
- Econometrics
- Fooled by Randomness
- Meta-analysis
- Multiple comparisons problem
- Selection principle
- Texas sharpshooter fallacy
- v
- t
- e
- Acquiescence
- Ambiguity
- Anchoring
- Attentional
- Attribution
- Authority
- Automation
- Availability
- Belief
- Blind spot
- Choice-supportive
- Commitment
- Confirmation
- Compassion fade
- Congruence
- Cultural
- Distinction
- Dunning–Kruger
- Egocentric
- Emotional
- Extrinsic incentives
- Fading affect
- Framing
- Frequency
- Frog pond effect
- Halo effect
- Hindsight
- Horn effect
- Hostile attribution
- Impact
- Implicit
- In-group
- Mean world syndrome
- Mere-exposure effect
- Negativity
- Normalcy
- Omission
- Optimism
- Out-group homogeneity
- Outcome
- Overton window
- Precision
- Present
- Pro-innovation
- Response
- Restraint
- Self-serving
- Social comparison
- Social influence bias
- Spotlight
- Status quo
- Substitution
- Time-saving
- Trait ascription
- Turkey illusion
- von Restorff effect
- Zero-risk
- In animals
- Cognitive bias mitigation
- Debiasing
- Heuristics in judgment and decision-making