Lecture 11 - Cognitive Bias Flashcards
What is bias?
prejudiced or unsupported judgements in favour of or against one thing, person, or group as compared to another, in a way that is usually considered unfair
What are heuristics?
approximate strategies or ‘rules of thumb’ for decision making and problem solving that do not guarantee a correct solution but that typically yield a reasonable solution or bring one closer to hand
What are the 3 initial heuristics - Tversky & Kahneman 1973?
- representativeness = when people make decisions based on categories that are similar to them
- availability = the ease which an idea can be recalled
- anchoring & adjustment = when individuals depend too heavily on some initial information (i.e. an anchor) in making decision
What is a schema?
a mental framework that bundles knowledge together in an organised way i.e. categories
What is an attitude?
- an association between a category and an evaluative valence e.g. a gut feeling
- based on schemas
- can be implicit or explicit
- can be developed through direct interaction or vicarious contact
Cognitive biases - fundamental attribution error?
‘The tendency for attributions to underestimate the impact of situational factors and to overestimate the role of dispositional factors in controlling behaviour’ - Ross 1977
Cognitive bias - intergroup bias?
- social identity = an individuals self concept derived from perceived membership in relevant social groups
- the status of the group is determined by social comparison with out-groups
- when the in-group has a higher status than the out-group this reflects positively on the group members self concept
- individuals want to feel good about themselves, therefore they tend to favour their in-group and discriminate against their out-group
What are some other cognitive biases?
- the halo effect = the tendency for an impression created about one aspect of an individual to influence opinions on other areas
- gamblers fallacy = belief that past results influence future random events
- hot hand fallacy = mistaken belief that a person who experiences success has a greater chance of success in further attempts
- confirmation bias = the tendency to seek, interpret and create information that verifies existing beliefs
- false-uniqueness effect = the tendency to view one’s own qualities, traits and personal attributes as unique
What is the Dunning-Kruger effect?
- people are very inclined to view themselves as more competent than they are
- those with the least ability are the most likely to overrate their skills
- poor performers lack the expertise needed to realise how badly they’re doing
What is the implicit association test (IAT)?
- it isn’t literally measuring bias, it measures reaction time
- the quicker your able to sort different words/ images the quicker your association is
- has found that 80% of people have a bias for age, 69% have for weight, 68% have for race and 76% have for disability
Criticisms of the IAT?
- criticised for being ambiguous over whether it’s measuring state vs trait bias
- can be strongly effected by the environment
-> low test-retest reliability - questioned if it is measuring bias or cultural awareness
- no evidence that a high bias score on this test has any impact on real life behaviour in the real world
Bias in organisations?
- organisations need to become practical and focus on the things they can control
- they should design procedures and structures to minimize how often biases can affect decision making
Kahneman’s dual process theory?
- The brain receives 11,000,000 bits of information per sec but we are only capable of processing 40 bits consciously
- So we rely on heuristics and stereotypes to navigate the world and dominate our social interactions
- System 1 = fast, unconscious, automatic, everyday decisions, error prone
- System 2 = slow, conscious, effortful, complex decisions, reliable
Bias and neuropsychology?
- The amygdala is one of the ‘oldest’ parts of the brain, it controls emotion
- Using FMRI we know that it reacts differently when seeing demographically different people
- This isn’t rationale or conscious