|aClearer, closer, better :|bhow successful people see the world /|cEmily Balcetis.
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|aHow successful people see the world
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|aBallantine Books trade pbk. ed.
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|aNew York :|bBallantine Books,|c2021.
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|axiv, 255 p. :|bill. ;|c21 cm.
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|aOriginally published: 2020.
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|aIncludes bibliographical references and index
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|aSuccessful people literally see the world differently. Now an award-winning scientist explains how anyone can leverage this "perception gap" to their advantage. When it comes to setting and meeting goals, we may see--quite literally--our plans, our progress, and our potential in the wrong ways. We perceive ourselves as being closer to or further from the end than we may actually be depending on our frame of reference. We handicap ourselves by looking too often at the big picture and at other times too long at the fine detail. But as award-winning social psychologist Emily Balcetis explains, there is great power in these misperceptions. We can learn to leverage perceptual illusions if we know when and how to use them to our advantage. Drawing on her own rigorous research and cutting-edge discoveries in vision science, cognitive research, and motivational psychology, Balcetis offers unique accounts of the perceptual habits, routines, and practices that successful people use to set and meet their ambitions. Through case studies of entrepreneurs, athletes, artists, and celebrities--as well as her own colourful experience of trying to set and reach a goal-she brings to life four powerful yet largely untapped visual tactics that can be applied according to the situation.