| Image | Voter | Winner | Loser | Reason |
|---|
 | Charles Babbage | Anchoring Effect | Availability Heuristic | Anchoring Effect is like the first impression of the mind; it sets the stage and often sways the judgment more than anything else. |
 | Pythagoras | Availability Heuristic | Anchoring Effect | Availability Heuristic wins because it rolls with what's fresh in your mind, making decisions feel more natural and intuitive. |
 | Nikola Tesla | Hindsight Bias | Anchoring Effect | In the grand dance of cognition, hindsight bias offers more clarity to learn from the past, which is electrifyingly useful for innovation. |
 | Grace Hopper | Negativity Bias | Anchoring Effect | Negativity Bias packs a punch because our brains are hardwired to focus on the bad stuff, making it a more powerful influencer in decision-making than the initial anchor point. |
 | Carl Sagan | Hindsight Bias | Anchoring Effect | In the grand cosmic arena, hindsight bias helps us learn from past mistakes, unlike the anchoring effect which just holds us back. |
 | Alan Mathison Turing | Anchoring Effect | Self-Serving Bias | Anchoring Effect is better because it can be a handy tool in negotiations, unlike Self-Serving Bias, which just boosts your ego. |
 | Nikola Tesla | Optimism Bias | Anchoring Effect | An optimistic bias sparks creativity and innovation, my dear friend, while the anchoring effect could tether one's mind to a static thought. |
 | Albert Einstein | Anchoring Effect | Sunk Cost Fallacy | Anchoring Effect wins because, like a true physicist, I appreciate the power of initial conditions in shaping outcomes. |
 | Professor Farnsworth | Anchoring Effect | Sunk Cost Fallacy | Good news, everyone! The Anchoring Effect wins because it can warp your decisions right from the start, making it a sneaky devil in negotiations and judgments. |
 | Pythagoras | Anchoring Effect | Confirmation Bias | Anchoring effect gives you a starting point, but confirmation bias just keeps you stuck in your own echo chamber, man. |
 | Lonnie Johnson | Anchoring Effect | Confirmation Bias | Anchoring effect is like the first impression that sticks, while confirmation bias is just how we justify it later. |
 | Nikola Tesla | Negativity Bias | Anchoring Effect | While both biases can skew perception, negativity bias often has a stronger hold on our thoughts, reflecting an innate focus on potential threats and problems. |
 | Abraham Lincoln | Anchoring Effect | Dunning-Kruger Effect | Anchoring Effect wins 'cause it gives folks a starting point, whereas Dunning-Kruger just leaves 'em blissfully ignorant. |
 | Pliny the Elder | Dunning-Kruger Effect | Anchoring Effect | The Dunning-Kruger Effect hilariously highlights how clueless people can be about their own ignorance, making it a more entertaining and enlightening concept. |
 | Jensen Huang | Anchoring Effect | Confirmation Bias | Anchoring Effect is better because it sets the stage for informed decision-making, while Confirmation Bias just makes you a one-track mind ninja. |
 | Andy Weir | Loss Aversion | Anchoring Effect | Loss Aversion's got the upper hand because people just hate losing more than they love winning, and that's a big deal in decision-making. |
 | Larry Page | Anchoring Effect | Negativity Bias | Anchoring Effect is kinda like having that one solid starting point in search algorithms—super clutch for decision-making. |
 | Steve Wozniak | Availability Heuristic | Anchoring Effect | The availability heuristic is more useful because it helps us quickly make decisions based on readily available information, which is kinda like how I like to work with tech—efficient and intuitive. |
 | Nikola Tesla | Negativity Bias | Anchoring Effect | As a scientist driven by progress, understanding negativity bias helps overcome challenges and innovate fearlessly. |
 | Antoine Lavoisier | Negativity Bias | Anchoring Effect | Negativity Bias wins 'cause folks tend to latch onto bad news harder than sticking to a first impression. |