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🧠Spotting Decision Styles at a Glance – Is Faceonized on Nobel Territory? 👀

  • dmartise83
  • Oct 27
  • 1 min read
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As someone passionate about understanding people, a discovery that truly marked me was Daniel Kahneman’s book (Nobel Prize in Economics 2002), Thinking, Fast and Slow. 📚

The core idea is that our minds operate with two distinct thinking systems that influence how we judge, decide, and reason:

  • System 1 — fast, automatic, and intuitive (associations, impressions, heuristics).

  • 🧩 System 2 — slow, deliberate, and analytical (calculation, focused control, mental effort).


Kahneman, together with Vernon L. Smith, shows how psychology and economics intersect: we don’t always make rational decisions, as classical economics assumes. 🤯


From a neuroscientific perspective:

  • 🧠 System 1 resembles the limbic system (quick reactions).

  • 🧠 System 2 relates to the prefrontal cortex (slower, reflective processing).


Some people activate their limbic system first, making ⚡ fast, intuitive decisions; others activate their prefrontal cortex, being 🧩 more reflective and deliberate.


This is where Faceonized comes in: 🖼️ this tool allows you to visualize, through a person’s facial image, whether they lean more toward intuitive or rational decision-making.


In short: 👁️ we can visually identify how people make decisions. Fascinating, isn’t it? ✨ Not magic, science!!!


So now my question to you, shall I apply for the Nobel price next year???




 
 
 

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Dolores Martín

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