I would guess that the concept of bias as used in cognitive psychology is not well known in the broad public. It’s generally mixed up with the concept of having a conflict of interest.
Most people also don’t think in terms of probability which you need to think about implicit biases the way it’s conceptualized in cognitive science.
Even someone like Obama had episodes like his “it’s 50/50” comment in the hunt for Bin Ladin.
I would guess that the concept of bias as used in cognitive psychology is not well known in the broad public. It’s generally mixed up with the concept of having a conflict of interest.
Can you explain the difference a “bias” in cognitive psychology and how you think Cinton/Kaine used the term?
I’m not speaking about the difference in how they used the term but in the way it’s understood in the public. Clinton likely has a decent idea of what the academic concept of implicit bias happens to be.
I would guess that the concept of bias as used in cognitive psychology is not well known in the broad public. It’s generally mixed up with the concept of having a conflict of interest.
Most people also don’t think in terms of probability which you need to think about implicit biases the way it’s conceptualized in cognitive science. Even someone like Obama had episodes like his “it’s 50/50” comment in the hunt for Bin Ladin.
Can you explain the difference a “bias” in cognitive psychology and how you think Cinton/Kaine used the term?
My sense is that they are related...closely.
I’m not speaking about the difference in how they used the term but in the way it’s understood in the public. Clinton likely has a decent idea of what the academic concept of implicit bias happens to be.