Definitionv1
People feedback: interpretive information from others that
People feedback: interpretive information from others that provides context about how actions were perceived, including social motivations, biases, and emotional states that systematically distort the signal
Why This Is a Definition
This definition establishes the precise semantic boundary of people feedback by emphasizing its interpretive nature, the inclusion of social motivations and biases, and the systematic distortion that occurs. It distinguishes it clearly from reality feedback and identifies its error profiles.
Connections
Defines (30)
AxiomExtended Cognition ThesisAxiomAutomatic Narrative Generation Precedes Conscious EvaluationAxiomDirected Attention as Depletable ResourceAxiomPerception as Predictive ConstructionAxiomHindsight Bias and Calibration NecessityAxiomExpertise Transforms Perceptual ChunkingAxiomLinguistic Structuring of ThoughtAxiomAutomatic Fusion of Observation and InterpretationAxiomCognitive Dissonance Drives Information AvoidanceAxiomDual Coding Theory: Verbal and Visual ChannelsAxiomConversational Memory Asymmetry From Production PlanningAxiomUltradian and Circadian Cognitive RhythmsAxiomAttention as Gate to Conscious PerceptionAxiomPatterns Exist in Hierarchical Logical LevelsAxiomEmotional Hijacking of JudgmentAxiomSystematic Overconfidence TaxonomyAxiomEmotion as Systematic Cognitive ModulatorAxiomAvailability Heuristic MechanismAxiomBias Blind Spot AsymmetryAxiomNo Direct Access to RealityAxiomCognition Operates Through Dual Processing SystemsAxiomLooping Effects of Human ClassificationAxiomAutomatic Pattern PerceptionAxiomHierarchical Chunking Expands CapacityAxiomPiagetian Equilibration Through Schema DynamicsAxiomFlexible Context-Dependent CategorizationAxiomPeople interpret failure as either evidence about theirAxiomWhen estimating future task duration, people naturally adoptAxiomExpert performance in complex domains requires deliberateAxiomRegulatory flexibility—the ability to shift between