The Rhyme-as-Reason Effect: When Catchy Feels True

Mental Minute di Hassen, Zsolt, & NotebookLM

Note sull'episodio

The Rhyme-as-Reason Effect is a cognitive bias where rhyming statements seem more truthful than non-rhyming ones. This episode explores why our brains link rhythm with credibility, how it’s used in persuasion and advertising, and how to spot—and resist—deceptively catchy logic. Sound logic isn’t always lyrical.

Parole chiave
Dunning-KrigerOverestimateCognitive BiasSelf ImprovementSurvivorship BiasRepresentativeness heuristicSunk Cost FallacySunk CostBen FranklinBenjamin FranklinBen Franklin EffectEconomicsInfluenceAnchoringAnchoring EffectCognitive DissonanceMindsetLindy Effect