People with facial anomalies, such as palsies and scars, often experienceprejudice. To others, their anomalies are taken (without evidence) to signal negativepersonalitytraits. In several studies, we have described this phenomenon, known as the “anomalous-is-bad” stereotype (Hartung et al., 2019...
Keep this in mind when quickly judging others’ success and setting your own goals.[Wealthy is what you don’t see.]Every bit of savings is like taking a point in the future that would have been owned by someone else and giving it back to yourself.Do...
The J or P preference stands for judging or perceiving. This preference shows how youinteractwith the outside world. It doesn’t say anything about what’s inside you; only how you interact externally, and how others perceive you. To understand the J/P preferences, we have to fi...
Those who feel good about themselves have less interest in judging others. Source: wavebreakmedia/Shutterstock Despite our best efforts, we all judge others. It might be over small things, like a co-worker who took too long of a lunch break. Or it might be over bigger issues, such as a...
Reading others: We are skilled at reading “thin slices” of behavior—as when judging someone’s warmth from a 6-second video clip. Blindsight: Some blind people even display “blindsight”—they can intuitively place an envelope in a mail slot they cannot consciously see. Second, our ...
People with a growth mindset are also constantly monitoring what’s going on, but their internal monologue is not about judging themselves and others in this way. Certainly they’re sensitive to positive and negative information, but they’re attuned to its implications for learning and constructive...
In the course of everyday life, perceivers make sense of one another with speed and confidence, judging intentions, forming impressions, predicting a person's next move. But what is the nature of such social inferences and how do they unfold? Building on the work of philosophers and ...
<The Psychology of Money>: Luck and risk are siblings.They are both the reality that every outcome in life is guided by forces other than individual effort.NYU professor Scott Galloway has a related idea that is so important to remember when judging success—both your own and others':"Nothin...
Judging types to be too focused on social expectations and what other people want and not as in touch with what they personally want, need, or feel. This can show up in parenting relationship struggles, where the Feeling-Judging type wants to teach the kids a lot of social protocol and ...
. In contrast to laypeople, existential risk mitigators thus found human extinction to be uniquely bad even when the description of the outcomes did not include information about the quality of the future. This suggests that judging human extinction to be uniquely bad, as measured by our task,...