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Found 3 Skills
Identify and analyze cognitive biases including confirmation bias, anchoring, availability heuristic, and sunk cost fallacy in decision-making contexts. Use this skill when the user needs to audit a decision for bias, understand why a team keeps making the same mistakes, design debiasing interventions, or evaluate whether a conclusion is based on evidence or cognitive shortcuts — even if they say 'are we fooling ourselves', 'why do we keep getting this wrong', or 'is this analysis biased'.
Apply behavioral finance theory to identify systematic investor biases and their impact on asset prices. Use this skill when the user needs to analyze irrational market behavior, explain pricing anomalies through cognitive biases, diagnose investor decision errors, or when they ask 'why do investors hold losers too long', 'how does loss aversion affect pricing', or 'what biases drive this market pattern'.
Apply cognitive bias detection whenever the user (or Claude itself) is making an evaluation, recommendation, or decision that could be silently distorted by systematic thinking errors. Triggers on phrases like "I'm pretty sure", "obviously", "everyone agrees", "we already invested so much", "this has always worked", "just one more try", "I knew it", "the data confirms what we thought", "we can't go back now", or when analysis feels suspiciously aligned with what someone wanted to hear. Also trigger proactively when evaluating high-stakes decisions, plans with significant sunk costs, or conclusions that conveniently support the evaluator's existing position. The goal is not to paralyze — it's to flag where reasoning may be compromised so it can be corrected.