100% tevredenheidsgarantie Direct beschikbaar na je betaling Lees online óf als PDF Geen vaste maandelijkse kosten 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
College aantekeningen

Self and society

Beoordeling
-
Verkocht
-
Pagina's
5
Geüpload op
15-03-2023
Geschreven in
2019/2020

Lecture focused on self and society, covering self-concepts, the spotlight effect, memories and self, self-perception, theory on imagination, theories on social comparison, upward and downward social comparison, culture, theory of multiple selves.

Meer zien Lees minder
Instelling
Vak









Oeps! We kunnen je document nu niet laden. Probeer het nog eens of neem contact op met support.

Geschreven voor

Instelling
Studie
Onbekend
Vak

Documentinformatie

Geüpload op
15 maart 2023
Aantal pagina's
5
Geschreven in
2019/2020
Type
College aantekeningen
Docent(en)
Dr orkun yetkili
Bevat
Alle colleges

Onderwerpen

Voorbeeld van de inhoud

Cognitive Psychology |Lecture 8|19th Nov


DECISION MAKING
Decision: a choice between available alternatives.
Decision making: the process of developing and analyzing alternatives and choosing from
among them
Judgment: the cognitive, or “thinking”, aspects of the decision-making process


Decision making process
Trial and error decision making
Strategy: predict an outcome, choose the best, learn from experience to improve
predictions, use experience in a cost-effective way minimize effort/time


Framework for studying decision-making
Neuroscience/neuroeconomics
- Neural correlates of subjective value
- Value comparison and integration
- Perceptual decision-making
Psychology
- social decision-making
- Biases and heuristics
Philosophy
- Unconscious decision-making
- Free will (&addiction)


Are our decisions rational?
Models of rational choice view the mind as if it were a ‘supernatural being’ possessing
‘powers of reason’, ‘boundless knowledge’, and ‘all of eternity’ with which to make
decisions
Humans make inferences about their world with limited time, knowledge, and
computational power.
Satisficing: we show bounded rationality – we are rational, but within limits (Simos, 1957)

, The subjective assessment of most real quantities has to rely on incomplete data of limited
validity, Tversky and Kahneman 1974
- The mind has to resort to heuristic that afford useful proxies most of time
- These heuristics are economical and usually effective, but they lead to systematic
and predictable errors in certain situations
- Heuristics = mental shortcuts that lighten the cognitive load of making decisions
Bounded rationality (Simon 1957): the idea that decision making deviated from rationality
due to human limitations in cognition capability


Availability heuristic
Field of application: memory-based judgments of frequency or probability
Example: overestimation of risks that are easily available in memory
Karlsson, Loewenstein and Ariely (2008) showed that people are more likely to purchase
insurance to protect themselves after a natural disaster they have just experienced than
they are to purchase insurance on this type of disaster before it happens.
Why?
- Kahnman: we tend to assess the relative importance of issue by the ease with which
they are retrieved from memory – and this is largely determined by the extent of
coverage in the media.
- We often lack the time/resources to investigate in during decision making. The
availability heuristic is a useful way to quickly arrive at conclusions.
- ‘If I can remember it easily, it must be important’ ‘ however, if we rely on faulty
estimates of the probability of an event, our perceptions of risk and error may be
skewed and lead us to focus on the wrong risks or ignore the important ones.
Anchoring and adjustment
Field of application: when we make judgments under uncertainty we use this heuristic by
starting with a certain reference point (anchor) and then adjust it insufficiently to reach a
final conclusion
Example: if you have to judge another person’s productivity the anchor for your final
(adjusted) judgment may be your own level of productivity
- Anchoring is the tendency to rely on initial information to ‘anchor’ subsequent
judgements
- Once the anchor is set, we are biased towards interpreting information around the
anchor, even if we eventually discover the anchor to be incorrect or less relevant
than the new information
- If we are unable to re-anchor, the initial anchor will prevent us from making fully
rational decisions based on an unbiased analysis
Conjunction fallacy




2
€7,11
Krijg toegang tot het volledige document:

100% tevredenheidsgarantie
Direct beschikbaar na je betaling
Lees online óf als PDF
Geen vaste maandelijkse kosten

Maak kennis met de verkoper
Seller avatar
petrajindrichovska

Ook beschikbaar in voordeelbundel

Maak kennis met de verkoper

Seller avatar
petrajindrichovska University of Westminster
Volgen Je moet ingelogd zijn om studenten of vakken te kunnen volgen
Verkocht
0
Lid sinds
2 jaar
Aantal volgers
0
Documenten
19
Laatst verkocht
-

0,0

0 beoordelingen

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

Recent door jou bekeken

Waarom studenten kiezen voor Stuvia

Gemaakt door medestudenten, geverifieerd door reviews

Kwaliteit die je kunt vertrouwen: geschreven door studenten die slaagden en beoordeeld door anderen die dit document gebruikten.

Niet tevreden? Kies een ander document

Geen zorgen! Je kunt voor hetzelfde geld direct een ander document kiezen dat beter past bij wat je zoekt.

Betaal zoals je wilt, start meteen met leren

Geen abonnement, geen verplichtingen. Betaal zoals je gewend bent via iDeal of creditcard en download je PDF-document meteen.

Student with book image

“Gekocht, gedownload en geslaagd. Zo makkelijk kan het dus zijn.”

Alisha Student

Veelgestelde vragen