We judge things by what came right before, not on their own merits. Anything looks better or worse depending on its neighbour.
What is the contrast effect? Read the full idea →A $5 small coffee feels cheap next to a $9 large — the large exists mainly to make the others look reasonable.
Agents show a dingy place first so the next, ordinary house feels like a gem by contrast.
Put one hand in hot water, one in cold, then both in lukewarm — it feels hot to one hand and cold to the other.
An A-student's B+ disappoints while the same grade thrills a struggling classmate.
After agreeing to a $30,000 car, a $300 add-on feels trivial by comparison.
That's just how memory works. Lock the contrast effect in with a 5-minute active-recall session — spaced repetition, no signup.
Try this idea free →One tap adds it to your review queue — we bring it back right before you'd forget.