Lecture 12 - Judgment and Decision Making Flashcards
Current thinking on decision making understand to many of our decisions are based on HEURISTICS.
T or F?
True.
Why do we have heuristic thinking over critical thinking?
It requires less time and mental energy.
Who are Amos Tversky and Daniel Kahneman?
Daniel Kahneman wrote Slow and Fast Thinking, and together with Amos Tversky is considered one of the fathers of behavioural economics and cognitive theories of decision making.
Who came up with the idea of BOUNDED RATIONALITY?
Herbert Simon (1916 - 2001).
Bounded rationality states that humans are mostly rational, but our rationality has limits based on our cognitive abilities.
What is SATISFYCING?
A decision-making strategy based on finding an adequate solution, as opposed to an ideal solution (proposed by Herbert Simon.
What were the two main findings from Paul Meehl (1954)?
1) Clinical predictions tend to perform more poorly than statistical predictions
2) Clinical predicitons overweight case characterisitcs and underweighs base rates.
What is the AVAILABILITY HEURISTIC?
Events that come to mind more easily are considered more probable than events that are not so easily recalled.
This is one explanation for why the lay person might say that homicide is more probable than dying from appendicitis.
In an experiment by Kahneman and Tversky (1973) subjects studied a list of male and female names and were then asked to recall whether there were more male or female names.
What were the findings of this experiment and how are these explained by the availability heuristic?
The study list had both ordinary and celebrity names for both male and females.
Whilst the proportion of male and female names was 50/50, the proportion of celebrity names for each gender was altered.
When asked whether female or male names were the most frequent on the study list, participants chose whichever gender had the most celebrity names.
This was interpreted as an example of the availability heuristic. Because the celebrity names were more accessible and memorable than the ordinary names participants overestimated the proportion of these names.
What are some real-world examples of how the availability heuristic can lead to misleading consequences?
The few deaths caused by covid vaccinations, which were highly publicised, lead to a fear of getting the vaccination despite the risk/benefit ratio.
Plane crashes compared to car crashes is another example.
Do Kahneman and Tversky argue that the availability heuristic can lead to ILLUSORY CORRELATIONS?
Yes.
Illusory correlations are correlations that do not exist, but which are thought to exist.
In a reflection on Chapman and Chapmans work on illusory correlations, Kahneman and Tversky use the availbility heuristic to explain how pariticpants assumed that the pictures of people with clinical mental health disorders had facial features that reflected the diagnosis because of the stereotypes like mentally unwell people have “crazy eyes” for example.
Why do we use the AVAILBILITY HEURISTIC?
Because we do not know the exact proportions of or likelihoods of certain things, when we go to make decisions or judgements about probabilities we draw on our memory and use that as a source of guestimating an event.
An example of this would be that we can recall more plane crashes than car crashes and therefore we think that plane crashes are more likely than car crashes. As a result, we are happier to drive than to fly in a plane.
Is the availability heuristic affected by memory limitations?
Yes.
What is the REPRESENTATIVENESS HEURISTIC?
Proposed by Kahneman and Tverky (1974), the represenativeness heuristic states that we make judgements on the basis of resemblance over probability.
E.g. if we see a really “nerdy” person on campus we might think they math, but it is much more likely they do psychology based on frequency.
What is base rate?
Relative frequency of something in the population.
Do we tend to ignore base rates when making decisions?
Yes.
The RELATIVENESS HEURISTIC is an example of this.