Publication Date: 2020/03/05
Abstract: While judging others, individuals utilize many, many shortcuts (biases/perceptual errors) (Robbins, and Judge, 2011). These biases do in fact create dilemmas for people. There are a myriad of biases. This research paper examines the ensuing rampant types of biases: 1. Selective Perception, 2. The Halo Effect, 3. The What-is-Beautiful- is-Good Bias, along with the ramifications they have on various people, situations, in addition to effective modern- day bias prevention techniques. Educators are afflicted by the Halo bias (Keeley et al, 2013). Halo bias arises when a rater’s assessment concerning one facet of the educator has an effect on the rest of that individual’s ratings (Keeley et al, 2013). For instance, if a student adores a professor’s character, she judges him/her as being a great communicator as well (Keeley et al, 2013). The What-is-Beautiful-is-Good bias materializes when ratees’ CV caliber is identical, and employers are partisan in their opinion of applicants’ fitness for a job due to the diverse levels of applicants’ physique and facial allure (Cristofaro , 2017).
Keywords: Biases, Perception, Perceptual Errors, What-is- Beautiful-is-Good Bias, Halo Effect Bias, Selective Perception Bias, Effective Modern Prevention Techniques, Human Resource Management, and Organizational Behavior.
DOI: No DOI Available
PDF: https://ijirst.demo4.arinfotech.co/assets/upload/files/IJISRT20FEB090.pdf
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