L8 - Frames and Rationality Flashcards

1
Q

What are the standards of rationality?

A
  • Sensitivity to relevant information: ability to make judgments and decisions that are sensitive to probabilities of critical events and usefulness of evidence
  • Consistency: in equivalent situations, given the same information, people should make equivalent decisions
  • People make diff decisions based on how the same info is framed
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2
Q

What is a study on framing?

A
  • Asked ppts about the flu virus and how to stop it
  • Gave 4 options: ppts picked those when framed ‘lives saved’ and the uncertain option compared to lives lost
  • Even though all answers are logically equivalent
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3
Q

What was a study looking at framing and product evaluation?

A
  • Ppts asked to evaluate ground beef that was labelled either as 75% lean or 25% fat
  • Some given label only, some tasted beef before seeing label and some tasted beef after seeing label
  • Label only had biggest change on factor of greasiness from lean to fat, quality and taste
  • If people are rational = logically equivalent situations = equivalent choices, decisions, evaluations
  • Judgements are influenced by superficial aspects of the framing of a problem, rather than being based on the essential info given
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4
Q

What is the effect of a reference point?

A
  • Imagine having a 4 ounce glass filled and then coming back to see 2 ounces - 69% of ppts called it half-empty
  • When that glass is empty and then filled to 2 ounces - 88% selected = half-full
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5
Q

What is the point of a reference point?

A
  • Reference points reliably influence speakers frame selection
  • Frames therefore must carry info beyond their literal content
  • Frames that are logically equivalent might convey different information
  • Specifically, the selective frame would provide evidence of the speaker’s reference point
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6
Q

What are conservational implicatures?

A
  • Things implied by utterances but not explicitly stated
  • We make pragmatic assumptions when people speak to us: relevant, concise, honest, clear
  • Listeners use these to make inferences about broader context and meaning of what people say
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7
Q

Framing and information leakage?

A
  • Speakers use frames depending on their reference point
  • In choosing one frame versus another, the speaker is leaking information about their reference points
  • Means that speaker is implicitly communicating info about their evaluation of the current situation relative to an unstated reference point
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8
Q

What is valenced logically equivalent frames?

A
  • Speakers tend to choose a frame that refers to the attribute that has increased from the reference point to the current situation
  • ‘it’s better than it might have been’ where 200 people survive, and its worse than it might have been
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9
Q

Summary:

A
  • If speakers choose between logically equivalent ways of framing a situation in an informative way
  • If listeners are sensitive to this tendency of speakers
  • Then changing judgement depending on the frame used is rational
  • Unknown reference points and implicatures makes studying rationality very hard as you don’t know how participants understand a question
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