Heuristics and Biases
Why dumb people do smart things… and vice versa.
Overview Context Heuristics as biases (defects)
Availability Anchoring and adjustment Representativeness (Revisited)
Heuristics as intelligence Recognition “Fast and frugal” Tit-for-tat (social heuristics
Conclusion
Context
Rational Choice Theory Utility Theory Probability Theory Bounded Rationality
Rational Choice Theory von Neumann & Morgenstern (1947) attempted
to remove psychological assumptions from the theory of decision making: Individuals have precise information about the
consequences of their actions Individuals have sufficient time and capability to
weigh alternatives All decisions are “forward looking” (e.g., the “sunk-
cost fallacy”) “Game theory” is RCT in practice
Utility & Probability Theory UT determines how preferences are
determined within RCT A response to the St. Petersburg Paradox (1734) Strictly construed, UT assigns a common currency
(utiles) to disparate outcomes
Probabilistic reasoning Under uncertainty, the “value” of a choice is the
expected value of probabilistic outcomes Savage (1972) formalized the conjunction of UT and
Bayesian probabilistic reasoning
Bounded Rationality Acknowledges several limitations of UT and RCT as
descriptive models of individual choice People lack:
Perfect information of outcomes and probabilities Consistent utility functions across domains Time and cognitive capabilities to comprehensively enact the
prescriptions of UT and RCT
Experts and everyday decision makers are error-prone
Useful in the domain of problem-solving Simon (1955) argued for satisficing
Individuals make decisions that are “good enough” considering the costs of decision-making, the specific goal, and cognitive limitations
Why heuristics? RCT & UT are terrible descriptive models in
many cases Bounded Rationality’s limitations are
insufficient to explain human behavior Sometimes information is insufficient even for BR Many judgments are not goal-directed or encased in
problem-solving tasks
Human errors are systematic Discovering heuristic rules of judgment can explain
these systematic errors
Heuristics Substitute easy questions for difficult ones
(attribute substitution) Defined heuristic rules specify the substitution Allow judgment and decision making in cases
where specific and accurate solutions are either unknown or unknowable
Availability, anchoring and adjustment, and representativeness are frequently considered “metaheuristics” since they engender many specific effects
Heuristics as error-generators
How smart people do dumb things Kahneman, Slovic, & Tversky (1974)
Availability Anchoring and adjustment Representativeness
Availability Heuristic “The ease with which instances or occurrences
can be brought to mind” motivates judgment Retrievability of instances
“Were there more males or females on a given list?” Effectiveness of a search set
“Do more English words begin with r or have r as the third letter?”
Biases of imaginability in ad hoc categories “Which is larger: 10 C 2 or 10 C 8?”
Illusory correlation Chapman & Chapman (1969)
Condition 1
1×2×3×4×5×6×7×8 = ?
Condition 2
8×7×6×5×4×3×2×1 = ?
Anchoring and adjustment
Insufficient adjustment Condition 1: 1×2×3×4×5×6×7×8
Mean answer: 512
Condition 2: 8×7×6×5×4×3×2×1 Mean answer: 2250
Anchoring and adjustment
Correct answer: 8! = 1×2×3×4×5×6×7×8 =8×7×6×5×4×3×2×1 =
40,320
Anchoring and adjustment Biases in the evaluation of conjunctive and
disjunctive events Probability of conjunctive events overestimated Probability of disjunctive evens underestimated
Anchoring in the assessment of subjective probability distributions Variance of estimated probability distributions
narrower than actual probability distributions Common to naïve and expert respondents
Representativeness Likelihood of a condition is judged by similarity to
a condition, mitigating factors notwithstanding Insensitivity to prior probability of outcomes
“Imagine a group of (70/30) lawyers and (30/70) engineers.”
“Dick is a 30 year old man. He is married with no children. A man of high ability and high motivation, he promises to be quite successful in his field. He is well-liked by his colleagues.”
Participants judged Dick to be equally likely to be an engineer regardless of prior probability condition
Base rate neglect
Representativeness Insensitivity to sample size
A certain town is served by two hospitals. In the larger hospital about 45 babies are born each day, and in the smaller hospital about 15 babies are born each day. As you know, about 50 percent of all babies are boys. However, the exact percentage varies from day to day…For a period of 1 year, each hospital recorded the days on which more than 60 percent of the babies born were boys. Which hospital do you think recorded more such days?
The larger hospital (21)The smaller hospital (21)About the same (within 5% of each other) (53)
Representativeness Misconceptions of chance
“The law of large numbers applies to small numbers as well.”
Expert researchers select sample sizes too small to fairly test hypotheses (Cohen, 1969)
Conjunctive fallacy Linda! Robust effect:
Linda is more likely to be a bank teller than she is to be a feminist bank teller, because every feminist bank teller is a bank teller, but some women bank tellers are not feminists, and Linda could be one of them
Representativeness Conjunctive fallacy
Linda! Robust effect:
1. Linda is more likely to be a bank teller than she is to be a feminist bank teller, because every feminist bank teller is a bank teller, but some women bank tellers are not feminists, and Linda could be one of them
2. Linda is more likely to be a feminist bank teller than she is likely to be a bank teller, because she resembles an active feminist more than she resembles a bank teller
65% of participants selected argument 2
Representativeness Misconceptions of Regression to the Mean
Why flight instructors conclude that criticism is more effective than praise
Heuristics as intelligence
How dumb people do smart things:when less (information) is more
Recognition Heuristic Who will win in the soccer match: Manchester
United vs. Shrewsbury Town? (Ayton & Onkal, 1997) Which has a greater population: San Diego or San
Antonio? (Goldstein & Girgerenzer, 2002)
Turkish participants as accurate as British in the former; German participants more accurate than American in the latter
“Fast and Frugal” Heart-attack patient
Standard, multivariate patient-interview vs.
Limited-information decision tree of 3 yes/no Q’s.
Decision tree “more accurate in classifying risk than complex statistical methods”
Ta
(Breiman et al., 1993) , in (Todd and Gigerenzer, 1999)
“Tit-for-tat” Simple game-theory strategy:
In the first round: always cooperate Subsequently:
Remembers partner’s (opponent’s) one (!) previous response
Reciprocates previous response This simple cooperation heuristic bested many highly
sophisticated algorithms that based their decisions on high memory of partner’s actions and intense computational machinery (Axelrod, 1984)
Interacts well with other tit-for-tat machines as well “Why selfish people do nice things” – a simple
heuristic for social cooperation
Heuristics: bias or intelligence Bias View
limited decision-making methods that people often misapply to situations where UT, RCT, and PT should be applied instead
instantaneous responses based on attribute substitution – switch hard questions for easy ones
sources of predictable error and underperformance
Intelligence View “intelligent behavior”
need not be computationally expensive
frugal representations and response mechanisms are more tractable and plausible
simple rules can generate rich cognitive and social effects