The Latest Insights from Resolutn
At Resolutn, we believe in sharing our insights. Here we offer our unique perspectives and insights into the latest ways that technology is helping attorneys and insurance companies work more efficiently.
Embrace the Future: Why Resolutn is the Answer for Change-Resistant Adjusters and Law Firms
Resolutn is the answer for professionals looking to improve their efficiency, communication, and outcomes, even if they’re initially hesitant to embrace change.
When Biases Collide: How the Confirmation and Availability Biases Work Together to Skew Litigation Outcomes
Most cognitive bias research examines each bias individually. The problem is that in real-life litigation, individual biases do not exist in a vacuum. Instead, in real-life, all 100 or so biases work collectively to shortcut the human brain into hasty decision making.
Knowing What You Don’t Know: How the Dunning-Kruger Effect Complicates Litigation
How much do you know about what you don’t know? When assessing your own abilities, how good are you at recognizing the limits of your knowledge?
How Optimism Can Skew Litigation Outcomes
You may be surprised to learn that optimism is more than just an individualistic character trait; it’s an engrained human bias that tells us that good things are bound to happen to us, and that negative events are unlikely.
Hindsight in Litigation is Not Always 2020
This tendency to look back on unpredictable events and think that they were easily predictable, or even inevitable, in hindsight is aptly called the hindsight bias.
A Risky Mirage?: How the Framing Effect Distorts Litigation and Settlement Outcomes
The glass half full / half empty example is a demonstration of a cognitive bias known as the framing effect.
Appearance Matters: How the Halo Effect Can Disrupt Litigation
In litigation, appearance matters, and I don’t just mean appearing in court on the record. How you present yourself: what you look like, what you...
Confirming Your Litigation Fears: The Impact of Confirmation Bias in the Courtroom
Confirmation bias is the tendency for people to search for, interpret, favor, and recall information that confirms their preexisting beliefs.
Is Litigation an Unnecessary Gamble? Litigation and the Gambler’s Fallacy Bias
The issue with this misconception of chance is that the gambler’s fallacy doesn’t limit itself to the casino.
Don’t Let Bias Anchor You Down: The Cognitive Bias of Anchoring in Litigation
Anchoring is one such cognitive bias that appears in the law, manifesting in litigation, mediation, and negotiation.
Choosing Auto-Accident Litigation: What Could it Cost?
Efficient, cost-effective, timely, predictable: everything you want when you’re in the middle of a lawsuit, and the exact opposite of what traditional litigation provides.