The framing effect is how the same fact feels different depending on how it's worded — gain vs loss, 90% vs 10%, cheap vs expensive. Examples:
What is the framing effect? Read the full idea →Identical food, opposite feeling. "90% fat-free" sells; "10% fat" sits on the shelf.
Told a procedure has a 90% survival rate, patients choose it; told it has a 10% death rate — the same number — many refuse.
A cash discount and a card surcharge can be the same price, but "avoid the fee" stings, so shoppers pay cash.
Subscriptions feel tiny priced per day and large priced per year — same cost, very different yes.
Money framed as getting your own money back feels different from a windfall, changing how freely people spend it.
That's just how memory works. Lock the framing effect in with a 5-minute active-recall session — spaced repetition, no signup.
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