Atlas / Shrink Thinking / Better Thinking
SC-0045Evidence: under reviewShrink Thinkingapplied

Mental Models

Better models create better decisions.

Shrink Definition

Mental models are internal representations the brain uses to understand, predict, organize, and respond to the world. Rather than processing every experience from scratch, the mind relies on simplified models built from previous learning, experience, observation, and reflection. Mental models aren't reality. They're maps of reality.

Plain language

Your brain doesn't see the world exactly as it's. It sees the world through the models it has built.

Shrink Insight

When your model changes, your world often changes with it.

Why it matters

Mental models influence: • decision making • leadership • relationships • learning • investing • medicine • entrepreneurship • communication Improving thinking often means improving the models through which thinking occurs.

Common misunderstanding

Mental models aren't beliefs. They're the structures that organize beliefs.

Shrink Perspective

A map can be useful while remaining incomplete.

Shrink Reflection

Which assumptions about life have changed most over the last ten years?

Shrink Journal

Describe one situation where your understanding changed dramatically after learning something new. What model changed?

Shrink Step

When learning something important, ask: "What model of the world is this improving?"

Shrink Minute

The quality of your decisions depends partly on the quality of the models guiding them.

Shrink Takeaway

Improve the map. Improve the journey.

Medical boundary

This concept is educational and shouldn't be used to self-diagnose. It doesn't replace care from a licensed clinician. Symptoms, medication, and treatment decisions should be discussed with a qualified professional, and emergency symptoms require emergency care.

Evidence summary

Mental models are widely discussed across cognitive science, education, systems thinking, behavioral economics, and decision science as useful representations that simplify complex reality while guiding reasoning and behavior.

Sources

American Psychological Association (APA); Peer-reviewed scientific literature

Reference status: authorities listed citation pending