Recently, @seriouslynow pointed me to a nice primer on user research by @semanticwill. My favorite slide lists five common biases,

which are:
- Confirmation bias (favoring data that supports your position)
- Framing effect (asking questions in a way that influences the answers)
- Observer-expectancy effect (influencing answers by the very act of posing the questions as a study)
- Recency bias (overly weighing more recent data over less recent data)
- False consensus (assuming everyone shares your point of view)
or “CFORF” for short. With a little rejiggering, we get a nice pneumonic:
- False consensus (assuming everyone shares your point of view)
- Framing effect (asking questions in a way that influences the answers)
- Observer-expectancy effect (influencing answers by the very act of posing the questions as a study)
- Recency bias (overly weighing more recent data over less recent data)
- Confirmation bias (favoring data that supports your position)
as in, “Stick a FFORC in it!”
</ rimshot> :-P