Psychology

Why you assume everyone thinks like you

People systematically overestimate how many others share their own beliefs, habits and choices. In a classic 1977 study, Stanford students who agreed to wear an advertising sandwich board guessed most peers would too; those who refused guessed most peers would refuse. The bias holds even when real survey data says otherwise.

Lee Ross, David Greene & Pamela House, The 'False Consensus Effect': An Egocentric Bias in Social Perception and Attribution Processes — Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 1977

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