THINK NKING ING TRAP APS S ON N THE E PSYCHOL CHOLOG OGY OF - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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THINK NKING ING TRAP APS S ON N THE E PSYCHOL CHOLOG OGY OF - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

THINK NKING ING TRAP APS S ON N THE E PSYCHOL CHOLOG OGY OF HEURI EURISTICS TICS AND ND BIASES SES Ren F.W. . Dieks ekstr tra, a, Ph Ph.D .D Emeritus itus Profes essor sor of Psycholog chology Un University sity


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THINK NKING ING TRAP APS S

ON N THE E PSYCHOL CHOLOG OGY OF HEURI EURISTICS TICS AND ND BIASES SES

René é F.W. . Dieks ekstr tra, a, Ph Ph.D .D Emeritus itus Profes essor sor of Psycholog chology Un University sity College lege Roose

  • sevelt

elt Profes essor sor of Youth uth and d Developm elopment ent Un Univer ersity sity of Appli plied ed Sci ciences nces, , The e Ha Hague gue (ww www.diek .diekstr stra.nl) a.nl)

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Part one: on the evolutionary base of over-selfconfidence

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Who of you drives a scooter/car?

  • 1. Yes
  • 2. No
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Who of you is inclined to think you are a better scooter/car driver than the average scooter/car driver?

1.

Yes, I think so

2.

No, I don’t think so

3.

Not applicable

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Who of you is or has been active as forensic expert?

1.

Yes

2.

No

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Who of you is inclined to think that you are/have been a better forensic expert than the average forensic expert?

1.

Yes, I think so

2.

No, I don’t think so

3.

Not applicable

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Who of you is or has been a parent?

1.

Children

2.

No children

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Who of you is inclined to think that you are/have been a better parent than the average parent?

1.

Yes, I think so

2.

No, I don’t think so

3.

Not applicable

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Part two: why the human is nothing less than a miracle

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Some brainfacts

 160 billion braincells  80 billion neurons  Each connected to other cells:  Important neurons 1000 to 10.000 connections  So trillions connections in our brain!  In addition 80 billion gliacells  Protectors, cleaners, connection-strengtheners  Effort to copy the human brain (SpiNNacker Project)  1 million neurons  Weighting 450 kilo’s en consumes 50.000 watt

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Copying the human brain (SpiNNacker):

As big as Boeing’s largest hall Consumes energy of +/- 3 nuclear plants

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While our brain:

Weights 1,5 kilogram consumest 30 watt

It is a mira racl cle, e, but one problem: em: it has been en delivered ered withou hout t a manual

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Part three: on the brain’s rules of thumb, heuristics and biases

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Two psychologists-giants in this field cartographers of ‘heuristics’ and ‘biases’ in the human brain

  • Daniel Kahneman (Princeton University,

Nobel laureate Economics 2002)

  • Richard Thaler (University of Chicago,

Nobel laureate Economics 2017)

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Our brain is of at least two minds, one filled with ‘cognitive’ instincts usually called heuristics and biases

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A study among 5 men and 995 women. J. is 23 years old, at the point

  • f graduating as engineer. On Saturday evenings J. drives through

town with male and female friends, music at its loudest and drinking beer heavily. Question: what is most probable?

J . i s a m a n . . J . i s a w

  • m

a n . .

50% 50%

1.

  • J. is a man.

2.

  • J. is a woman.
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Location of Regions of Interest (ROI) involved in analytic versus heuristic thinking

(De Neys et al. HEURISTICS AND BIASES IN THE BRAIN: DUAL NEURAL PATHWAYS FOR DECISION MAKING)

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Misled by your own thoughts

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Heuristics and Biases: a selection

– Anchor heuristic – Availability heuristic – Loss aversion – ‘Overconfidence’ heuristic – Representativiness heuristic

– Hindsight bias – Confirmation bias – Truth bias – Planning fallacy – Fundamental attribution error – False consensus – Etc.

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Part four: on the anchor heuristic

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Anchor-heuristic

  • The Anchoring Heuristic, also know as focalism, refers to the human tendency

to accept and rely on the first piece of information received before making a

  • decision. That first piece of information is the anchor and sets the tone for

everything that follows.

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– (a) ‘How happy are you?’ – (b) ‘How often do you make love?’ – (a) ‘How often do you make love?’ – (b) ‘How happy are you?’ – (a) ‘How healthy do you feel yourself?’ – (b) (i.a.) ‘What were the causes of death of your (grand)parents?’ – (a) ‘(i.a.) ‘What were the causes of death of your (grand)parents?’?’ – (b) ‘How healthy do you feel yourself?’

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In a debate, it is always to your advantage to be the last speaker instead of going first (you want the last word)

Yes No

36% 64%

  • 1. Yes
  • 2. No
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A particular type of anchor: truth bias

It is human nature to believe communication is honest, which in turn makes us highly vulnerable to deception. The first statement or speaker therefore usually has the advantage. (cfr: The early bird catches the worm…)

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Truth Bias and Fake news

‘Puigimond did ask for political asylum in Denmark’ ‘He called Rajoy an elephant in a china shop’

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Who of these two guys you like most? Bill: intelligent, active, critical, impulsive, stubborn, jealous Donald: jealous, stubborn, critical, impulsive, active, intelligent Does the presentation sequence of judgements affect, ‘anchor’ your choice?

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Anchor Heuristic

Anchor heuristic study (Tversky a.o.. 2002) among traders/Wall Street gurus

Where do you think the Dow Jones (Industrial Average) will be over 6 months from now? 6000? 12000? – Anchor on 6000 average estimate: 8523 – Anchor on 12000 average estimate: 9840

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Part five: on the availability heuristic

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How Easily Does It Come to Mind? The Availability Heuristic

  • Availability Heuristic
  • A mental rule of thumb whereby people

base a judgment on the ease with which they can bring something to mind.

The trouble with the availability heuristic is that sometimes what is easiest to remember is not typical of the overall picture, leading to faulty conclusions.

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When would somebody rate his or her creativity higher, when asked for 6 or 12 examples?

1. 6 examples 2. 12 examples 3. No difference

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In percentages, how big is your contribution to running the household at home?

  • A. I live alone
  • B. 80 %
  • C. 60%
  • D. 40%
  • E. 20%
  • F. 0-19%
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Priming: making unnoticed more available

  • Increasing the probability of a choice by offering

(unnoticed) beforehand a particular concept or stimulus.

– Denmark – Elephant

  • Very relevant in (health) care and culture change in

communities or companies

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Part six: on the heuristic of loss aversion

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If a salesman tell a potential client that he/she should urgently replace the central heating oven, which one of the following statements is most effective to stimulate the client to act

  • 1. You save money by replacing the oven.
  • 2. You lose money by not replacing the oven.
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“The pain of loss is on the average twice als big as the pleasure of gain”

(Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, fast and slow, 2011)

“We humans are by nature loss aversive creatures

(Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, fast and slow, 2011)

Loss aversion

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Part seven: on multitasking and the heuristic of overselfconfidence

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How good are you at multitasking?

  • 1. Very good
  • 2. --
  • 3. --
  • 4. --
  • 5. Not good at all
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M U L T I T A S K I N G 1 2 3……………………etc S I N G L E T A S K I N G 1 2 3……………………. etc. .

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Test: How good you are in multitasking

Count in the next video:

  • 1. The number of times you hear the word “magic”
  • 2. You see the name or picture of the man named

David Copperfield

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How good are you at multitasking?

  • 1. Very good
  • 2. --
  • 3. --
  • 4. --
  • 5. Not good at all
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Crucial conclusions

  • We are selfinstructing, selfmanaging, selfcoaching,

selfadvising, selfsuggesting beings, controlled by a large number of evolutionary build-in heuristics and biases

  • How much selfcontrol do we in actual fact have with

regard to our selfinstructions, selfmanagement, selfcoaching, selfadvices, selfsuggestions?

  • The essence of selfcontrol? Knowledge and selfawareness
  • f your heuristics and biases
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You can assess yourself with regard to your vulnerability for and self-awareness of heuristics en biases with the help of:

The Heuristics and Biases Scale (HBS, Sklad and Diekstra, 2014)

See: http://questionary.ucr.nl/index.php?sid=74544&lang=nl Or contact: r.diekstra@ucr.nl or www.Diekstra.nl Source: Sklad, M., Diekstra, RFW (2014) The Development of the Heuristics and Biases Scale (HBS) Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences. Volume 112, 7 February 2014, Pages 710-718