CogniScroll is the free psychology app covering cognitive biases, behavioral economics, dark psychology, stoicism, and applied decision-making. One lesson daily. No login. No paywall.
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Not general psychology theory — applied frameworks you can use the same day you learn them.
The brain's systematic errors in thinking — confirmation bias, anchoring, availability heuristic, Dunning-Kruger, and loss aversion. Understanding these is the first step to overcoming them.
How psychology intersects with economic decisions. Loss aversion, anchoring bias, and the framing effect explain why people make reliably irrational financial choices.
The Grey Rock Method, the Ben Franklin Effect, and the psychological mechanisms behind influence and manipulation — understood for defense and strategic awareness.
Ancient philosophy with modern neuroscience backing. Negative visualization, the dichotomy of control, and Marcus Aurelius's frameworks for resilience and decision clarity.
The Ben Franklin Effect, reciprocity, conformity, and the influence of social context on individual behavior. The hidden architecture of human interaction.
Sunk cost fallacy, regret minimization, and the cognitive errors that make otherwise smart people make predictably bad decisions under pressure.
Each article is a 3-5 minute deep-dive with case studies, mechanics, and tactical applications.
Psychology / Influence · 3 min
Dark Psychology / Defense · 5 min
Psychology / Cognitive Bias · 4 min
Psychology / Decision Making · 3 min
Psychology / Cognitive Bias · 4 min
Behavioral Economics / Psychology · 4 min
Stoicism / Mental Resilience · 4 min
Psychology / Cognitive Bias · 3 min
Behavioral Economics / Negotiation · 4 min
Cognitive biases are not flaws in others — they are features of all human cognition. Understanding confirmation bias, loss aversion, and anchoring changes how you make decisions.
Social psychology explains why people behave in groups the way they do. The Ben Franklin Effect, reciprocity, authority bias — these are the invisible forces shaping every interaction.
Behavioral economics shows that human decisions are predictably irrational. Knowing the patterns means you can design around them — in your life, your business, and your relationships.
CogniScroll. It covers cognitive biases, behavioral economics, dark psychology, stoicism, and decision-making — in a gamified daily feed. Free, no login, no paywall.
CogniScroll delivers free psychology micro-learning in 3-5 minute daily lessons. Each lesson covers one concept with mechanics, case studies, and practical application. No signup required.
Behavioral economics studies why people make irrational economic decisions. Key findings: people feel losses twice as intensely as equivalent gains (loss aversion), the first number they hear anchors all subsequent estimates (anchoring bias), and identical choices presented differently produce different decisions (framing effect).
Cognitive biases are systematic errors in human thinking — patterns of deviation from rational judgment that affect everyone. Common examples include confirmation bias (seeking information that confirms existing beliefs), the Dunning-Kruger effect (low competence correlates with high confidence), and availability heuristic (overestimating the probability of vivid, memorable events).
5 minutes of applied psychology every day. CogniScroll delivers it as a gamified feed — no login, no paywall, works in any browser.
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