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Decision Making Traps . Traps in general Implications for Heuristic methods, forecasting, modeling in general. 1. Anchoring trap . first impressions Time series forecasting? Credit risk model too many inquiries get negative weight (how many is too many?). 2. Status Quo Trap .
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Decision Making Traps • Traps in general • Implications for Heuristic methods, forecasting, modeling in general.
1. Anchoring trap • first impressions • Time series forecasting? • Credit risk model • too many inquiries get negative weight • (how many is too many?)
2. Status Quo Trap • That’s the way it has always been • Inertia • School bullying • Key - doing something wrong is punished • doing nothing is generally not punished
3. Sunk Cost trap • digging the hole deeper • being blind to past mistakes • corporate strategy -barriers to exit • emotional attachment
4. Confirming Evidence Trap • I have made up my mind, don’t confuse me with facts. • Eg. Political candidate – who is more honest/worthy/qualified – Bush or Gore?
5. Framing Trap • Glass half full or half empty? • Biases in surveys
Problem • There are 600 people in a town that have been infected by a certain virus. There are two competing programs, of which one has to be selected. • If Program A is adopted, 200 people will be saved • If Program B is adopted, there is a one-third probability that 600 people will be saved and a two-thirds probability that no people will be saved • Which of the two programs would you favor?
Problem • There are 600 people in a town that have been infected by a certain virus. There are two competing programs, of which one has to be selected. • If Program C is adopted, 400 people will die • If Program D is adopted, there is a one-third probability that nobody will die and a two-thirds probability that 600 people will die • Which of the two programs would you favor?
Framing Effects • The two sets of choices are objectively identical. • Changing the description of outcomes from lives saved to lives lost is sufficient to shift prototypic choice from risk-averse to risk-seeking behavior.
6. Estimation traps • Decision calibration • Overconfidence - if I am incompetent, I am probably ignorant of it. • Lack of feedback - students may think they understand but fail on a test. • Lack of confidence - learned helplessness? • Recallability -what’s in the news?
Lockheed’s 1991 sales General Motors’ 1991 profit General Motor’s assets in 1991 Number of deaths due to pneumonia and influenza in the United States in 1990 The world population in 1990 Instructions Do not look up any information on these items. For each, write down your best estimate of the quantity. Next, put a lower and upper bound around your estimate, such that you are 98 percent confident that your range surrounds the actual quantity Problem - Overconfidence
Lockheed’s 1991 sales General Motors’ 1991 profit General Motor’s assets in 1991 Number of deaths due to pneumonia and influenza in the United States in 1990 The world population in 1990 $9,809,000,000 -$4,452,800,000 $168,259,000,000 78,640 5,333,000,000 Solution
Overconfidence Bias • "People generally ascribe more credibility to data than is warranted and hence overestimate the probability of success merely due to the presence of an abundance of data" (Sage, 1981, p. 648). • Predictive accuracy reaches a ceiling at an early point in an information gathering process • Confidence in decisions continues to climb as more and more information is obtained • This bias is most extreme in tasks of great difficulty
(A) xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx (B) xx xx xx xx xx xx xx xx xx PermutationsIn which structure are there more paths?How many paths do you think are there in each structure?
Margaret Thatcher James Eynon Barbara Walters Charles Stubbart Hillary Clinton Arlyn Melcher Indira Gandhi Jack Smith Madonna Greg White Instructions Read the list once. List of Names
Recall Test! • Are there more men or women on the list? • How many men are on the list? • How many women are on the list? • How confident are you of your answers? Provide a probability number ranging from 0 to 1 for each answer.
Recallability • Situations in which people assess the frequency of a class or the probability of an event by the ease with which instances or occurrences can be brought to mind. • People inadvertently assume that readily-available instances, examples or images represent unbiased estimates of statistical probabilities.
7. Representativeness • All families of six children in a city were surveyed. In 72 families the exact order of birth of boys and girls was G B G B B G. • What is your estimate of the number of families surveyed in which the exact order of births was B G B B B B?
Representativeness Bias • People consistently judge the more representative event to be more likely, whether it is or not. • Leads to major errors in the estimation of subjective probabilities • Subjective probability denotes any estimate of the probability of an event, which is given by subjects, or inferred from their behavior.