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Winning the Brain Game
Book

Winning the Brain Game

Fixing the 7 Fatal Flaws of Thinking

McGraw-Hill, 2016 mais...


Editorial Rating

7

Qualities

  • Scientific
  • Applicable
  • For Beginners

Recommendation

When you try to puzzle out a problem, your thinking can fail in seven predictable ways, such as leaping to conclusions, failing to ask the right questions and “self-censoring.” Strategy and innovation consultant Matthew E. May, an award winning author, says you can avoid becoming stuck in automatic thought patterns or prejudices if you recognize these relatively familiar, common cognitive errors and frame your problems carefully. May condenses research about thought patterns into straightforward, basic advice that can help you avoid sabotaging yourself. getAbstract recommends his lessons to executives and managers at all levels who are relatively new to the field of cognitive errors.

Take-Aways

  • When you try to puzzle out a problem, your thinking can fail in seven predictable ways. These cognitive errors are:
  • “Leaping” occurs when you jump to conclusions. Most people think of solutions before they fully understand the problem.  
  • “Fixation” is an umbrella term for internal biases, mental shortcuts, “rigidity and linear thinking,” as well as “go-to mind-sets, blind spots, paradigms” and “models.”

About the Author

Speaker, facilitator and coach Matthew E. May writes on strategy and innovation. He also wrote The Laws of Subtraction: 6 Simple Rules for Winning in the Age of Excess Everything and In Pursuit of Elegance: Why the Best Ideas Have Something Missing, written with Guy Kawasaki.


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    R. T. 3 years ago
    While there is nothing original in this, this seems like an interesting book, and far more valuable and practical than the rating suggests.
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    I. R. 7 years ago
    Most of these modes of thought are actually beneficial in my experience. When we are working with our teams in meetings having everyone think in the same direction at once increases the productivity of our meetings. I'd recommend the "Six Thinking Hats" for anyone looking to maximize the efforts and outputs of your meetings.
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    D. J. 7 years ago
    Interesting