Lecture 4 Flashcards

1
Q

What is hindsight bias? Why is it an example of heuristics?

A
  • Idea of knowing it all along
  • Study performed where they exploited history
  • Richard Nixon went to China during the cold war where they were isolated from the west.
  • Before Nixon went, they asked students how likely a number of possible outcomes are of his visit
  • Students responded with probability estimates
  • After Nixon returned to America, they asked the students to remember their previous judgements
  • People overestimated their probability judgements for events that happened vs underestimated judgements for things that did not happen
  • Example of Anchoring and Adjustment heuristic (100 or 0 = if it happened or not)
  • Shows that memory and judgement is a constructive process = coherence matters
  • Can be pernicious as you close yourself off to learning - kind of like lying to self
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2
Q

What is the Peak-End Rule?

A
  • Judgements of processes that extend over time
    STUDY
  • Subjected people to pain perception experiments, one 60s, and then 90s (first 60s were same level as discomfort as first episode, but 30s were marginally less discomforting)
  • Ppts rated how painful the experience was
  • Ppt rated longer episode as less painful than shorter one, and when asked to repeat one, they chose the longer trial
  • Neglected duration and absolute pain, and base judgements on the ‘peak’ experience e.g the end, instead of total pleasure/pain
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3
Q

What was the application to colonoscopy patients?

A
  • One of less painful procedures added at the end but otherwise identical
  • Ppts who had the extra period of slightly less pain at the end rated it as less painful
  • They would come next year
  • Implications = to have extra pain at the end but slightly less to increase return rates
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4
Q

What is the James Dean effect?

A
  • Ask people to read stories and asked them to rate their life
  • Same story of two men: one was a live fast, die young, another was similar, but then at the end of life stopped but still had a pleasant life
  • Short life ending on a high is judged as more rewarding than the same life with added mildly positive years at the end
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5
Q

What is affective forecasting?

A
  • Making judgements about the future
  • Asked people in California and mid-west how happy they thought people were in Cali/Mid-West
  • Cali known for beaches and fun, MW known for plain
  • Both sets of ppts thought Californians are happier, but they are not. BECAUSE they thought climate and culture had a bigger influence than other factors
  • People tend to neglect other situational factors (e.g family/friends) when predicting or remembering emotional states and tend to ignore adaptation
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6
Q

What was a study looking at Presidential election?

A
  • Asked ppts how happy they would be if Obama won the presidential election vs how happy they actually were
  • Overestimated their happiness/sadness but then normal situational factors returned and life continues as normal
  • We underestimate our ability to adjust
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7
Q

What is Temporal Discounting?

A
  • Things we value lose their value across time e.g £5 now or £5 in two weeks = people chose £5 now, but £10 in two weeks
  • Addicts are steeper discounters - rewards lose value quicker
  • Trading off small immediate rewards vs large delayed reward
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8
Q

What does hyperbolic discounting lead to?

A
  • Preference reversals: looking at two delayed rewards
  • e.g might prefer £120 in 13 months or £100 in 12 months
  • Later reward has a higher subjective value
  • BUT as the time of the reward approaches, we might prefer £100 now vs £120 in a month
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9
Q

What are real life implications for hyperbolic discounting?

A

Willingness to trade a large delayed reward in the future for a sooner smaller reward has implications in retirement, diet, drugs, sex and env protection

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10
Q

What underlies temporal preferences?

A
  • Uncertainty about future
  • Illusion of control: e.g money problems - can fix it in a month’s time
  • Ability to consume in the future - e.g life is too short, have the cake
  • Visceral influences vs self-control - hard to resist emotional/gut appeal
  • Projection bias: tendency to project current self into future = leads to both under/overestimating abilities/needs
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11
Q

What is the role of anticipation?

A
  • Anticipation of a reward or dread can carry utility
  • Study where ppts were asked how much you would be willing to pay to kiss their favourite movie star?
  • 3 days was preferred than right now
  • Worth more to avoid a nasty shock in 10 years than to avoid that same shock in 3 hours
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12
Q

What is The Reference Point Theory?

A
  • Similar to Prospect Theory, intertemporal choice is relative to a neutral reference point
  • People are willing to pay more for goods they will receive now vs at a later time
  • But the compensation they would require to postpone delivery of goods purchased now until the later time is greater than the Now-later difference
  • People are willing to pay a higher premium for accelerated delivery than the later-NOW difference
  • Delays are losses, speeding-up is gain
  • Losses loom larger than gains: Delay compensation is greater than speed-up cost
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13
Q

What a study looking at reference points?

A
  • How much would you pay to get this now? How much would you pay now to have this in a year? Immediate has more money than delayed
  • Secondary question said ‘out of stock’ you will be reimbursed you have to wait a year. Ppts chose $126 reimbursement to go from immediate to delayed WHEN initially there was only a $50 difference when they first bought it (first question)
  • Reference point changed, departure of time, time is commodity and is worth more
  • Opposite was also down where the moved the year up, and people were willing to pay a higher premium than what the initial price was for receiving it immediately (first question)
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