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Negativity Bias

The brain naturally overweights potential threats.

Shrink Definition

Negativity bias is the natural tendency for the human brain to give greater attention, emotional weight, and lasting memory to negative experiences than equally intense positive or neutral experiences. From an evolutionary perspective, paying greater attention to threats increased survival. In modern life, the same bias can distort how we evaluate our days, our relationships, and ourselves.

Plain language

Your brain remembers the criticism longer than the compliment.

Shrink Insight

Your brain is designed to notice what could hurt you before it notices what's going well.

Why it matters

Negativity bias influences: • confidence • relationships • leadership • anxiety • stress • memory • workplace performance • self-image A single criticism may outweigh ten compliments, not because it's more important, but because the brain gives it greater priority.

Common misunderstanding

Recognizing negativity bias isn't about becoming artificially positive. It's about recognizing that attention is naturally uneven.

Shrink Perspective

What your brain notices first isn't always what deserves the most importance.

Shrink Reflection

Which positive experiences from this week received far less attention than one frustrating moment?

Shrink Journal

Write down three difficult moments from today. Now write three positive or neutral moments. Which list came more easily?

Shrink Step

When something difficult happens, intentionally identify two things that also happened accurately, not positively, simply accurately.

Shrink Minute

Balanced thinking requires balancing attention.

Shrink Takeaway

Threat deserves awareness. It shouldn't own your entire perspective.

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

Negativity bias has been demonstrated across cognitive psychology, neuroscience, and behavioral science. Negative information is often processed more deeply, remembered longer, and influences future decisions more strongly than comparable positive information.

Sources

Baumeister; Rozin and Royzman (negativity bias); American Psychological Association (APA); Peer-reviewed scientific literature

Reference status: landmark attributed