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Found 2 Skills
Apply behavioral economics concepts including bounded rationality, prospect theory, mental accounting, and nudge theory to analyze decision-making biases. Use this skill when the user needs to understand why people make irrational economic decisions, design choice architectures, or apply nudges to influence behavior — even if they say 'why do customers make bad choices', 'how do we encourage people to save more', or 'design a better default option'.
Apply dual-process theory to diagnose whether judgments arise from fast intuitive (System 1) or slow analytical (System 2) processing and identify resulting cognitive biases. Use this skill when the user needs to explain why quick decisions go wrong, design choice architectures that account for cognitive defaults, audit decision processes for heuristic errors, or when they ask 'why do people misjudge probability', 'how to reduce snap-judgment errors', or 'when does intuition fail'.