This research examines the impact of perceptual tricks, particularly the Wagon Wheel Effect, on how we as humans decide on the environment and the management of natural resources. This manuscript argues, using the concepts developed from cognitive psychology, environmental psychology, and behavioral economics, that distorted views of dynamic systems result in the misinterpretation of ecological realities and, consequently, in suboptimal management and policy decisions. Using a qualitative methodological approach, the manuscript synthesizes the findings of the literature research, the findings of documented cases, and the interpretation of actual cases in the actual governance of the environment, focusing on fisheries, forests, water, and common pool resources. The principal message is that the presence of cognitive and behavioral shortcuts, such as confirmation bias, availability heuristic, and framing effect, distorts, in a systematic manner, the perceptions of the stakeholders of a situation, by placing a higher value on personal and media experiences than on factual information.
Osman Elmakki (Wed,) studied this question.