Beyond UX Design

Expectation Bias: Your Prediction Is Showing


Listen Later

Have you ever walked out of a usability session completely confident in your findings, only to ship something that quietly missed the mark?

What if the signal was there the whole time, and your brain just decided it wasn't worth logging?

This week on the Cognition Catalog, we tackle The Expectation Bias. This bias shapes what you notice before you've even decided what to think about it. Your brain has already generated a prediction before the first participant clicks a button or a teammate presents their work, and that prediction quietly shapes what registers as a signal and what gets explained away before you've made a single conscious decision about what any of it actually means.

We get into the science behind why this happens, and trace the research back to psychologist Robert Rosenthal's work in the early 1960s. His experiments, including the landmark Pygmalion in the Classroom study with Lenore Jacobson, showed that expectations don't just color our perceptions; they can actually change outcomes. That's a sobering thought when you consider how many design decisions are built on research we assumed was neutral.

We also dig into where this plays out on real teams: in usability sessions where hesitations get logged as "minor," in design reviews where leadership-championed features get a generous read while quietly doubted projects get interrogated at every turn, and in how we evaluate colleagues whose reputations have already done the evaluating for us. If any of that sounds familiar, this episode offers five concrete habits to help you catch the filter before it's already done its job. Give it a listen.

Topics:

• 00:00 - Perception is prediction

• 02:04 - A UX research cautionary tale

• 03:23 - Defining expectation bias

• 03:42 - Prediction errors explained

• 04:31 - Pygmalion effect origins

• 06:03 - Expectation vs confirmation

• 06:30 - How it warps team decisions

• 08:31 - Habits to reduce bias

• 10:47 - Wrap up and next steps


Thanks for listening! We hope you dug today’s episode. If you liked what you heard, be sure to like and subscribe wherever you listen to podcasts! And if you really enjoyed today’s episode, why don’t you leave a five-star review? Or tell some friends! It will help us out a ton.
If you haven’t already, sign up for our email list. We won’t spam you. Pinky swear.
• Get a FREE audiobook AND support the show
• Support the show on Patreon
• Check out show transcripts
• Check out our website
• Subscribe on Apple Podcasts
• Subscribe on Spotify
• Subscribe on YouTube
• Subscribe on Stitcher

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Beyond UX DesignBy Jeremy Miller

  • 5
  • 5
  • 5
  • 5
  • 5

5

49 ratings


More shows like Beyond UX Design

View all
The Joe Rogan Experience by Joe Rogan

The Joe Rogan Experience

229,674 Listeners

Planet Money by NPR

Planet Money

30,609 Listeners

99% Invisible by Roman Mars

99% Invisible

26,242 Listeners

Pivot by New York Magazine

Pivot

9,724 Listeners

ShopTalk by Chris Coyier & Dave Rupert

ShopTalk

500 Listeners

The Daily by The New York Times

The Daily

113,121 Listeners

The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett by DOAC

The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett

8,876 Listeners

Future of UX | Your Design, Tech and User Experience Podcast | AI Design by Patricia Reiners

Future of UX | Your Design, Tech and User Experience Podcast | AI Design

20 Listeners

Gooaye 股癌 by 謝孟恭

Gooaye 股癌

766 Listeners

NN/G UX Podcast by Nielsen Norman Group

NN/G UX Podcast

106 Listeners

Honest UX Talks by Wix Studio by Anfisa Bogomolova & Ioana Teleanu

Honest UX Talks by Wix Studio

41 Listeners

Dive Club 🤿 by Ridd

Dive Club 🤿

32 Listeners