Question
What is missed triggers?
Quick Answer
When you fail to notice a trigger you need to make it more salient.
Missed triggers is a concept in personal epistemology: When you fail to notice a trigger you need to make it more salient.
Example: You decide to do a breathing exercise every time you sit down at your desk after lunch. Three weeks in, you realize you have not done it once — not because you rejected the habit, but because you never noticed the cue. Sitting down had become so automatic that it produced zero attentional signal. You place a bright orange card on your keyboard before you leave for lunch. Now you cannot sit down without physically moving the card — and the trigger fires every time.
This concept is part of Phase 22 (Trigger Design) in the How to Think curriculum, which builds the epistemic infrastructure for trigger design.
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