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- Curse_of_knowledge abstract "The curse of knowledge is a cognitive bias that leads better-informed parties to find it extremely difficult to think about problems from the perspective of lesser-informed parties. The effect was first described in print by the economists Colin Camerer, George Loewenstein and Martin Weber, though they give original credit for suggesting the term to Robin Hogarth.An example of this bias would be of a tailor selling clothes. Because the tailor has made a dress, he is intimately familiar with the quality of the item in craftsmanship, features, and fabric quality. When pricing a dress for sale, however, he needs to take the point of view of an uninformed customer- someone might be walking into the store with no previous knowledge of the owner, dressmaker, or how difficult or easy the item is to make. The tailor, as hard as he might try to take the point of view of the customer, cannot completely separate himself from the knowledge he has of the quality of this dress, and therefore will assume a customer will value and pay much more for the dress than is actually true.".
- Curse_of_knowledge wikiPageID "35009581".
- Curse_of_knowledge wikiPageLength "11034".
- Curse_of_knowledge wikiPageOutDegree "18".
- Curse_of_knowledge wikiPageRevisionID "670664104".
- Curse_of_knowledge wikiPageWikiLink Adverse_selection.
- Curse_of_knowledge wikiPageWikiLink Category:Cognitive_biases.
- Curse_of_knowledge wikiPageWikiLink Charades.
- Curse_of_knowledge wikiPageWikiLink Cognitive_bias.
- Curse_of_knowledge wikiPageWikiLink Colin_Camerer.
- Curse_of_knowledge wikiPageWikiLink Dunning–Kruger_effect.
- Curse_of_knowledge wikiPageWikiLink Empathy_gap.
- Curse_of_knowledge wikiPageWikiLink False-consensus_effect.
- Curse_of_knowledge wikiPageWikiLink George_Loewenstein.
- Curse_of_knowledge wikiPageWikiLink Hindsight_bias.
- Curse_of_knowledge wikiPageWikiLink Information_asymmetry.
- Curse_of_knowledge wikiPageWikiLink Journal_of_Political_Economy.
- Curse_of_knowledge wikiPageWikiLink Naïve_realism_(psychology).
- Curse_of_knowledge wikiPageWikiLink Pantomime.
- Curse_of_knowledge wikiPageWikiLink Shoshin.
- Curse_of_knowledge wikiPageWikiLinkText "Curse of knowledge".
- Curse_of_knowledge wikiPageWikiLinkText "curse of knowledge".
- Curse_of_knowledge hasPhotoCollection Curse_of_knowledge.
- Curse_of_knowledge wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Curse_of_knowledge subject Category:Cognitive_biases.
- Curse_of_knowledge hypernym Bias.
- Curse_of_knowledge type Type.
- Curse_of_knowledge type Concept.
- Curse_of_knowledge type Type.
- Curse_of_knowledge comment "The curse of knowledge is a cognitive bias that leads better-informed parties to find it extremely difficult to think about problems from the perspective of lesser-informed parties. The effect was first described in print by the economists Colin Camerer, George Loewenstein and Martin Weber, though they give original credit for suggesting the term to Robin Hogarth.An example of this bias would be of a tailor selling clothes.".
- Curse_of_knowledge label "Curse of knowledge".
- Curse_of_knowledge sameAs لعنة_العلم.
- Curse_of_knowledge sameAs קללת_הידע.
- Curse_of_knowledge sameAs Kutukan_pengetahuan.
- Curse_of_knowledge sameAs m.0j62kbm.
- Curse_of_knowledge sameAs Проклятие_знания.
- Curse_of_knowledge sameAs Прокляття_знання.
- Curse_of_knowledge sameAs Q2901014.
- Curse_of_knowledge sameAs Q2901014.
- Curse_of_knowledge sameAs 知識的詛咒.
- Curse_of_knowledge wasDerivedFrom Curse_of_knowledge?oldid=670664104.
- Curse_of_knowledge isPrimaryTopicOf Curse_of_knowledge.