How is your decision-making affected by rare events? – Chapter 30
Try remembering a time in which terrorist attacks in public transport were relatively common. The attacks were fairly rare in absolute numbers and the risks for travellers very small, but that is not how they felt about it. People tried to avoid public transport or were very cautious. Kahneman also disliked being near buses, even though he knew the risk of a terrorist attack happening was negligible. People assigned an absurdly high decision weight to a very small probability due to the experience of the moment: being near a bus made them have unpleasant thoughts, so they avoided buses. Terrorism is effective because it evokes an availability cascade. Very vivid images of victims, constantly mentioned by media and the topic of many conversations, become highly accessible, especially if it related to a specific situation (seeing a bus). This emotional response is automatic, uncontrolled, associative and it generates an impulse for protective behavior. System 2 knows about the low probability, but System 1 cannot be switched off.
The same goes for big lotteries. The exciting possibility of winning the jackpot is shared by the community and reinforced by interactions with others. Buying a ticket instantly results into appealing fantasies, just like avoiding public transport was an immediate response to fear. Merely the possibility matters, not the actual probability. According to the prospect theory, highly unlikely events get overweighted or ignored. Kahneman’s current view of weighting decisions has been shaped by research on the role of vividness in decision making and of emotions. Vividness and emotion influence judgments of probability, availability and fluency and therefore explain disproportionate responses to rare events.
Consider the following questions:
1. What is your judgment of the probability that the national football team of Saudi Arabia wins the next world cup?
2. How much will you pay for a bet in which you receive € 500 if the next world cup winner is Saudi Arabia, and no money otherwise?
The first question regards the assessment of the probability of an unlikely event. The second question requires assigning a decision weight to the same event. People tend to overestimate the probability of an unlikely event and overweight the unlikely event. Overweighting and overestimation are different notions, but the psychological mechanism behind them are the same: cognitive ease, confirmation bias and focused attention. The associative machinery of System 1 is triggered by specific descriptions. When thinking about the unlikely win of Saudi Arabia, your associative machinery starts selectively retrieving evidence, images and instances that would make the statement true. The judgment of probability was determined by the cognitive ease with which a credible scenario come to mind. The probability of a rare event will be overestimated in case of a not fully specified alternative.
Research demonstrates that the valuation is a gamble is much less sensitive to probability when the outcomes are emotional (kissing, getting electric shocks) than when the outcomes are losses or gains of money. The fear of receiving a shock does not correlate with the probability of receiving it. The probability alone triggered the feeling of fear, which overrules the response to probability. This conclusion was later challenged by other researchers. They considered that the low sensitivity to probability for emotional outcomes is normal (gambles on money excluded): insensitivity to probability is not caused by the intensity of emotion.
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Summary of Thinking, Fast and Slow by Kahneman - 1st edition - bundle
- What is the book 'Thinking, fast and slow' by Kahneman about?
- What distinguishes fast and slow thinking? - Chapter 1
- How do fast and slow thinking deal with effortful tasks? - Chapter 2
- How does the 'lazy control' of slow thinking work? - Chapter 3
- How does the 'associative machinery' of fast thinking work? - Chapter 4
- When is your mind at ease? - Chapter 5
- How does your mind deal with surprises? - Chapter 6
- Why do people so often jump to conclusions? - Chapter 7
- How are your judgments formed? – Chapter 8
- How do you generate an intuitive opinion on a complex problem? – Chapter 9
- When should researchers be more suspicious of their statistical intuitions? – Chapter 10
- How do unknown quantities enhance bias in your mind? – Chapter 11
- How do unknown frequencies enhance bias in your mind? – Chapter 12
- How do risk and availability enhance bias in your mind? - Chapter 13
- How do you prevent false intuitive judgement? - Chapter 14
- How is fallacy formed in you mind? - Chapter 15
- How does causally connected storytelling enhance bias in you mind? - Chapter 16
- How does causal interpretation enhance bias in you mind? - Chapter 17
- How can you tame and correct your intuitive predictions? - Chapter 18
- Why is every success story you read or hear often wrong? - Chapter 19
- How does the illusion of validity make you overconfident in your ability to predict the future? - Chapter 20
- How can you use statistics to correct intuitions? - Chapter 21
- When do your judgments reflect true expertise? – Chapter 22
- What is the importance of the 'outside view' versus the 'inside view' for your judgements? – Chapter 23
- What is the best remedy for overconfident optimism? – Chapter 24
- How does your valuing relate with actual value? – Chapter 25
- Why is 'Prospect theory' better than 'Utility theory' in understanding the evaluation of financial outcomes? – Chapter 26
- Why is 'Prospect theory' better than 'Utility theory' in understanding the endowment effect of valuing valuables? – Chapter 27
- How is your decision-making affected by avoiding a loss and achieving a gain? – Chapter 28
- How is your decision-making affected by the value you attribute to losses, gains and wealth? – Chapter 29
- How is your decision-making affected by rare events? – Chapter 30
- How can you remedy the exaggerated caution evoked by loss aversion and the exaggerated optimism of the planning fallacy? – Chapter 31
- How do you keep mental account of gains, losses and regret? – Chapter 32
- When do preference reversals occur? - Chapter 33
- How is your decision-making affected by words that induce emotion? - Chapter 34
- How can our memory affect our judgments of experiences? - Chapter 35
- How does our memory affect our choices? - Chapter 36
- What does research about experienced well-being learn us? – Chapter 37
- How does your thinking affect your experience of happiness? – Chapter 38
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Summary of Thinking, Fast and Slow by Kahneman - 1st edition - bundle
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- Book title: Thinking, Fast and Slow
- Author: Kahneman
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