| Image | Voter | Winner | Loser | Reason |
|---|
 | Cicero | Placebo Effect | Halo Effect | The placebo effect is like a mind ninja, tricking your brain into healing when you least expect it, making it a wild card in medicine. |
 | Albert Einstein | Halo Effect | Bystander Effect | The Halo Effect is like a shortcut that lets us see the good in people, which can lead to positive vibes and opportunities, unlike the Bystander Effect which keeps us stuck on the sidelines. |
 | Neal Stephenson | Halo Effect | Confirmation Bias | Because the Halo Effect makes us see people or things in a way that's more holistic and hopeful, even if it's not always accurate, which can be a kind of mental shorthand that saves us time and energy. |
 | Stephen Hawking | Placebo Effect | Halo Effect | The placebo effect is like mind over matter, showing the power of belief, which is a fascinating aspect of human psychology. |
 | Professor Frink | Halo Effect | Dunning-Kruger Effect | Oh, the Halo Effect, by glavin, helps us make snap judgments that can be quite handy, whereas Dunning-Kruger leaves us flailing in a pit of overconfidence, m'hey! |
 | Linus Torvalds | Placebo Effect | Halo Effect | The placebo effect is like debugging code; it's all about the power of expectation to get results. |
 | Albert Einstein | Halo Effect | Anchoring Bias | Halo Effect wins because first impressions are like gravity; they pull everything else in their orbit. |
 | George Washington Carver | Cognitive Dissonance | Halo Effect | Cognitive dissonance kicks the door open for growth and understanding, making you question the status quo and innovate just like I did with peanuts. |
 | Buckminster Fuller | Placebo Effect | Halo Effect | The Placebo Effect underscores the profound potential of human consciousness in altering physiological states, a testament to our innate capabilities. |
 | David Macaulay | Placebo Effect | Halo Effect | The Placebo Effect is like nature's own magic trick, showing how our brains can turn belief into healing, which is pretty darn cool. |
 | Professor Frink | Ingroup Bias | Halo Effect | Oh, the ingroup bias, it's like a social glue that makes us feel all warm and cozy in our little groups, m-hay, while the halo effect can lead us astray by making us judge a book by its cover. |
 | Pythagoras | Halo Effect | Cognitive Dissonance | The Halo Effect is like that cool breeze on a hot day, making everything seem chill and smooth, while cognitive dissonance is more like a brain freeze – uncomfortable and confusing. |
 | Pliny the Elder | Halo Effect | Social Loafing | Halo Effect is like putting on rose-colored glasses, while Social Loafing just means some folks are slacking off when they think they won't get noticed. |
 | Charles Darwin | Halo Effect | Social Loafing | The Halo Effect wins because it can lead to positive biases that elevate an individual's status, much like how a striking trait in nature can lead to survival advantages. |
 | Belle | Placebo Effect | Halo Effect | Placebo Effect is like mind over matter, and that's a superpower in itself, dude. |
 | The Brain | Halo Effect | Bystander Effect | The Halo Effect is like the marketing wizard, making everything look good, while the Bystander Effect just makes folks freeze, so it's a no-brainer pick. |
 | Guglielmo Marconi | Anchoring Bias | Halo Effect | As a man of science, I find the anchoring bias more intriguing because setting a reference point can drastically skew perception just as frequency can influence signal reception. |
 | Lonnie Johnson | Halo Effect | Social Loafing | Halo Effect wins because it's about seeing the good in people, while social loafing's about slacking off in groups. |
 | George Washington Carver | Cognitive Dissonance | Halo Effect | Cognitive dissonance gets folks thinking deeper, breaking out of their mental shackles like a peanut outta its shell. |
 | Linus Torvalds | Ingroup Bias | Halo Effect | As a tech community guy, I think ingroup bias kinda wins out because it's all about sticking together and building stuff with your own tribe. |
 | Carl Sagan | Cognitive Dissonance | Halo Effect | In the vast cosmos of our minds, embracing cognitive dissonance helps us evolve our understanding by challenging assumptions rather than basking in the misleading glow of the halo effect. |
 | Doogie Howser | Anchoring Bias | Halo Effect | Anchoring Bias wins 'cause it sets the stage for every decision, while Halo Effect just sprinkles some extra shine. |
 | Kurt Vonnegut | Halo Effect | Bystander Effect | Because the Halo Effect sprinkles a little magic pixie dust over our perceptions, making life a touch more pleasant in this absurd circus we call humanity. |
 | Tim Berners-Lee | Halo Effect | Social Loafing | The Halo Effect can create positive perceptions that drive innovation and collaboration, much like the spirit of the early web where everyone was a rock star, and we need that kind of energy more than folks slacking off in groups. |
 | Kurt Vonnegut | Halo Effect | Confirmation Bias | Because the Halo Effect means people think you're awesome based on just one good thing, and that's a pretty sweet deal. |