Summary of Section B The smarter we are, the better decisions we will make. One of the _________1__________ of the statement is that our decisions are built on our intellectual rigor. Yet psychologists have uncovered ________2_______ that can lead to poor decisions in experts and laymen alike. Affected with the fundamental attribution error, for example, we tend to __________3__________ from others than from ourselves, ____________4____________ our own characters to be stainless. Infected with ________5________ , we are liable to veto things that refute our preexisting hypotheses. Overconfidence bias often comes into play in reality, especially when our confidence vastly exceeds the accuracy of our judgments. The _______6_______ is apt to arise when we form our estimation through recounting an example from memory, thereby arriving at __________7_________. And the ______8__________ can lead us to stay in damaging situations because we are stuck with the ________9________ that what we have already put in will decay if we leave. Our list of such biases could go on, but the key to repelling the above remains the same: When a decision matters, it is best to rely on _______10_______ and a careful examination of the evidence and to remain aware that what seems like good intuition is always subject to errors of judgment.