9.1 Heuristics: Difference between revisions

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Humans make many decisions on a daily basis, often in the absence of complete information or under constraints of limited time and cognitive capacity. We present the mechanism and usefulness of cognitive shortcuts such as availability heuristic and representativeness heuristic, as well as the often unnoticed pitfalls that arise from using them for judgments and decision making.
Humans make many decisions on a daily basis, often in the absence of complete information or under constraints of limited time and cognitive capacity. We present the mechanism and usefulness of cognitive shortcuts such as availability heuristic and representativeness heuristic, as well as the often unnoticed pitfalls that arise from using them for judgments and decision making.
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== The Lesson in Context ==
== The Lesson in Context ==

Revision as of 16:31, 30 August 2023

Topic Cover - 9.1 Heuristics.png

Humans make many decisions on a daily basis, often in the absence of complete information or under constraints of limited time and cognitive capacity. We present the mechanism and usefulness of cognitive shortcuts such as availability heuristic and representativeness heuristic, as well as the often unnoticed pitfalls that arise from using them for judgments and decision making.

The Lesson in Context

Humans make many decisions on a daily basis, often in the absence of complete information or under constraints of limited time and cognitive capacity. We use heuristics as useful shortcuts for quick decision making, which may introduce bias into our conclusions. The purpose of the lesson is not to cast doubt on our use of heuristics, but to recognize the limitations of quick human judgments and their consequences. This parallels 2.1 Senses and Instrumentation and 2.2 Systematic and Statistical Uncertainty, where the limitations of instruments are discussed and quantified, without rejecting the validity and usefulness of instruments altogether.

Earlier Lessons

2.1 Senses and InstrumentationTopic Icon - 2.1 Senses and Instrumentation.png
  • Senses and instrumentation are inherently imperfect, but imperfect tools can still be useful in obtaining partial knowledge. Similarly, heuristics are flawed, but they can make useful tools when time, knowledge, and mental resources are limited.
2.2 Systematic and Statistical UncertaintyTopic Icon - 2.2 Systematic and Statistical Uncertainty.png
  • The use of heuristics can often introduce bias into our judgments — tendencies to make one decision more often than another, paralleling the idea of systematic uncertainty in instrumental measurements.

Later Lessons

9.2 BiasesTopic Icon - 9.2 Biases.png
  • This lesson focuses on heuristics that affect our judgments of frequencies — how often things occur or likelihoods of events. The next lesson discusses biases in decision making that stem from a self-centered view of the world—an overemphasis on "me" and "now" and overusing defaults and assumptions.
10.1 Confirmation BiasTopic Icon - 10.1 Confirmation Bias.png
  • We single out confirmation bias into its own topic, as it permeates scientific and group decision making, affecting both our sense of the prevalence of events around us as well as the importance of "me" and "now".

Takeaways

After this lesson, students should

  1. Know that we use heuristics as a shortcut in everyday decision making.
  2. Recognize that while heuristics can be useful and necessary, they can also lead us astray by introducing biases into our decision making.
  3. Be able to identify cases of Base Rate Neglect.
  4. Be able to avoid the temptation to engage in Base Rate Neglect.
  5. Be able to identify cases of the Representativeness Heuristic, and not fall for it.
  6. Be able to identify cases of the Conjunction Fallacy, and not fall for it.
  7. Be able to identify cases of the Availability Heuristic, and not fall for it.
  8. Learn the basics of Bayesian reasoning.

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