Debiasing

Debiasing is the reduction of bias, particularly with respect to judgment and decision making. Biased judgment and decision making is that which systematically deviates from the prescriptions of objective standards such as facts, logic, and rational behavior or prescriptive norms. Biased judgment and decision making exists in consequential domains such as medicine, law, policy, and business, as well as in everyday life. Investors, for example, tend to hold onto falling stocks too long and sell rising stocks too quickly. Employers exhibit considerable discrimination in hiring and employment practices,[1] and many parents continue to believe that vaccinations cause autism despite knowing that this link is based on falsified evidence.[2] At an individual level, people who exhibit less decision bias have more intact social environments, reduced risk of alcohol and drug use, lower childhood delinquency rates, and superior planning and problem solving abilities.[3]

Debiasing can occur within the decision maker. For example, a person may learn or adopt better strategies by which to make judgments and decisions.[2][4] Debiasing can also occur as a result of changes in external factors, such as changing the incentives relevant to a decision or the manner in which the decision is made.[5]

There are three general approaches to debiasing judgment and decision making, and the costly errors with which biased judgment and decision making is associated: changing incentives, nudging, and training. Each approach has strengths and weaknesses. For more details, see Morewedge and colleagues (2015).[2]

General approaches

Incentives

Changing incentives can be an effective means to debias judgment and decision making. This approach is generally derived from economic theories suggesting that people act in their self-interest by seeking to maximize their utility over their lifetime. Many decision making biases may occur simply because they are more costly to eliminate than to ignore.[6] Making people more accountable for their decisions (increasing incentives), for example, can increase the extent to which they invest cognitive resources in making decisions, leading to less biased decision making when people generally have an idea of how a decision should be made.[7] Incentives can also be calibrated to change preferences toward more beneficial behavior. Price cuts on healthy foods increase their consumption in school cafeterias,[8] and soda taxes appear to reduce soda consumption by the public. People often are willing to use incentives to change their behavior through the means of a commitment device. Shoppers, for example, were willing to forego a cash back rebate on healthy food items if they did not increase the percentage of healthy foods in their shopping baskets.[9]

Incentives do not always debias and improve decision making. If people are using a suboptimal strategy by which to make judgments and decisions, incentives can exacerbate bias.[7] Incentives can backfire when they are miscalibrated or are weaker than social norms that were preventing undesirable behavior. Large incentives can also lead people to choke under pressure.[10]

Nudges

Nudges, changes in information presentation or the manner by which judgments and decisions are elicited, is another means to debiasing. People may choose healthier foods if they are better able to understand their nutritional contents,[11] and may choose lower-calorie meals if they are explicitly asked if they would like to downsize their side orders.[12] Other examples of nudges include changing which option is the default option to which people will be assigned if they do not choose an alternative option, placing a limit on the serving size of soda, or automatically enrolling employees in a retirement savings program.

Training

Training can effectively debias decision makers over the long term.[2][13][14] Training, to date, has received less attention by academics and policy makers than incentives and nudges because initial debiasing training efforts resulted in mixed success (see Fischhoff, 1982 in Kahneman et al.[15]). Decision makers could be effectively debiased through training in specific domains. For example, experts can be trained to make very accurate decisions when decision making entails recognizing patterns and applying appropriate responses in domains such as firefighting, chess, and weather forecasting. Evidence of more general debiasing, across domains and different kinds of problems, however, was not discovered until recently. The reason for the lack of more domain-general debiasing was attributed to experts failing to recognize the underlying "deep structure" of problems in different formats and domains. Weather forecasters are able to predict rain with high accuracy, for example, but show the same overconfidence in their answers to basic trivia questions as other people. An exception was graduate training in scientific fields heavily reliant on statistics such as psychology.[16]

Experiments by Morewedge and colleagues (2015) have found interactive computer games and instructional videos can result in long-term debiasing at a general level. In a series of experiments, training with interactive computer games that provided players with personalized feedback, mitigating strategies, and practice, reduced six cognitive biases by more than 30% immediately and by more than 20% as long as three months later. The biased reduced were anchoring, bias blind spot, confirmation bias, fundamental attribution error, projection bias, and representativeness.[2][13]

Sometimes effective strategies

Incentives

Nudges

Training

See also

References

  1. Mullainathan, Sendhil (January 3, 2015). "Racial Bias, Even When We Have Good Intentions". The New York Times. Retrieved July 25, 2016.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Morewedge, C. K.; Yoon, H.; Scopelliti, I.; Symborski, C. W.; Korris, J. H.; Kassam, K. S. (13 August 2015). "Debiasing Decisions: Improved Decision Making With a Single Training Intervention". Policy Insights from the Behavioral and Brain Sciences. 2 (1): 129–140. doi:10.1177/2372732215600886.
  3. Parker, Andrew M.; Fischhoff, Baruch (January 2005). "Decision-making competence: External validation through an individual-differences approach". Journal of Behavioral Decision Making. 18 (1): 1–27. doi:10.1002/bdm.481.
  4. Larrick, Richard (2004). Blackwell handbook of judgment and decision making (1. ed.). Malden, Mass. [u.a.]: Blackwell. p. 316. ISBN 978-1-4051-0746-4.
  5. Sunstein, Richard H. Thaler, Cass R. (2008). Nudge : improving decisions about health, wealth, and happiness (Revised and expanded ed.). New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300122237.
  6. Arkes, Hal R. "Costs and benefits of judgment errors: Implications for debiasing.". Psychological Bulletin. 110 (3): 486–498. doi:10.1037/0033-2909.110.3.486.
  7. 1 2 Lerner, Jennifer S.; Tetlock, Philip E. (1999). "Accounting for the effects of accountability.". Psychological Bulletin. 125 (2): 255–275. doi:10.1037/0033-2909.125.2.255.
  8. French, SA (2003). "Pricing effects on food choices.". The Journal of Nutrition. 133 (3): 841S–843S. PMID 12612165.
  9. 1 2 Schwartz, J.; Mochon, D.; Wyper, L.; Maroba, J.; Patel, D.; Ariely, D. (3 January 2014). "Healthier by Precommitment". Psychological Science. 25 (2): 538–546. doi:10.1177/0956797613510950.
  10. Ariely, Dan; Gneezy, Uri; Loewenstein, George; Mazar, Nina (April 2009). "Large Stakes and Big Mistakes" (PDF). Review of Economic Studies. 76 (2): 451–469. doi:10.1111/j.1467-937X.2009.00534.x.
  11. 1 2 Trudel, Remi; Murray, Kyle B.; Kim, Soyoung; Chen, Shuo (2015). "The impact of traffic light color-coding on food health perceptions and choice.". Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied. 21 (3): 255–275. doi:10.1037/xap0000049.
  12. Schwartz, J.; Riis, J.; Elbel, B.; Ariely, D. (8 February 2012). "Inviting Consumers To Downsize Fast-Food Portions Significantly Reduces Calorie Consumption". Health Affairs. 31 (2): 399–407. doi:10.1377/hlthaff.2011.0224.
  13. 1 2 "How a Video Game Helped People Make Better Decisions". Harvard Business Review. Retrieved 2015-10-17.
  14. Dhami, Mandeep (2013). Judgment and Decision Making as a Skill: Learning, Development and Evolution. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781107676527.
  15. Fischhoff, Baruch. "Debiasing". In Kahneman, Daniel; Slovic, Paul; Tversky, Amos. Judgment Under Uncertainty: Heuristics and Biases. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521284141.
  16. 1 2 Nisbett, R. E.; Fong, G. T.; Lehman, D. R.; Cheng, P. W. (1987-10-30). "Teaching reasoning". Science. 238 (4827): 625–631. doi:10.1126/science.3672116. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 3672116.
  17. Simmons, Joseph P.; LeBoeuf, Robyn A.; Nelson, Leif D. "The effect of accuracy motivation on anchoring and adjustment: Do people adjust from provided anchors?". Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. 99 (6): 917–932. doi:10.1037/a0021540.
  18. Hirt, Edward R.; Markman, Keith D. (1995). "Multiple explanation: A consider-an-alternative strategy for debiasing judgments.". Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. 69 (6): 1069–1086. doi:10.1037/0022-3514.69.6.1069.
  19. Hershfield, Hal E; Goldstein, Daniel G; Sharpe, William F; Fox, Jesse; Yeykelis, Leo; Carstensen, Laura L; Bailenson, Jeremy N (2011-11-01). "Increasing Saving Behavior Through Age-Progressed Renderings of the Future Self". Journal of Marketing Research. 48 (SPL): S23–S37. doi:10.1509/jmkr.48.SPL.S23. ISSN 0022-2437. PMC 3949005Freely accessible. PMID 24634544.
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