Decision Making Flashcards

1
Q

programmed decisions

A

repetitive and well defined, procedural and routine like putting on clothes in the morning

Reliable set out outcomes

No deep thinking needed

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2
Q

non-programmed decisions

A

non repetitive, require lots of deep thinking and problem solving abilities

Unreliable set of outcomes

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3
Q

deductive reasoning

A

start with a hypothesis and evaluate possibilities to reach a conclusion

  • example is looking for a girlfriend, where you already know what you’re looking for at the outset
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4
Q

inductive reasoning

A

start by looking at the observations then come up with a hypothesis

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5
Q

intuition is trusting your gut, when is it good and bad to use? (hunch vs automated expertise)

A

hunch: risky and opinionated

automated expertise: can be trusted, where someone has lots of experience doing something

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6
Q

bounded rationality

A

where the current solution/item is sufficient to outweigh the additional time and resources needed to find a better one

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7
Q

heuristics

A

things that your brain does to make quick decisions / mental shortcuts

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8
Q

cognitive bias

A

influenced by the info we notice / don’t notice

  • errors that lead to poor decisions
  • can be info processing biases or judging others biases
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9
Q

availability bias

A

when we favor info that comes to mind quick and easy

  • like New York police officers seem to have a more dangerous job, even though loggers have way more dangerous jobs based on death rates
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10
Q

representative bias

A

when we wrongly believe that similarity between two things increases their probability

  • like people think a quiet introverted man is more likely to be a librarian than a salesman, despite there being way more male salesmen than librarians
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11
Q

confirmation bias

A

only favoring info that conforms to our existing beliefs

  • less likely to remember stereotype inconsistency that exists
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12
Q

anchoring bias

A

relying too heavily on the first piece of info we receive

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13
Q

sunk cost / escalation of commitment fallacy

A

when we CONTINUE a behavior based on the time and energy you put into it, RATHER than the expected benefit of each marginal minute you put into it

  • We don’t like to admit that we’ve been wasteful / loss aversion
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14
Q

how to overcome sunk cost fallacy

A

thinking of the bigger picture

not looking back

setting your walk-away point from the start

find value in losses (focus on the lessons learned)

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15
Q

overconfidence bias

A

people are more confident in their own abilities than is objectively true

  • we think we are better drivers than we actually are
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16
Q

illusion of control

A

people overestimate their ability to control outcomes, like a lucky jersey for a hockey team OR throwing a dice harder for a higher number

17
Q

Dunning Kruger Effect

A

people believe they’re smarter than they are in certain situations

  • like people with a LIL bit of knowledge think they’re experts
  • but people who have learned all the complexities that exist think they don’t know much about the topic overall
18
Q

how does the Dunning Kruger effect apply to the survival guide example

A

a guy who watched Bear Grylls on TV prob thinks he’s an expert and will speak out

while someone who’s been on actual survival backpacking trips doesn’t think they know everything, and refrains from speaking up

19
Q

fundamental attribution error

A

tendency to give yourself credit when something good happens, and being more likely to blame external forces when you perform poorly

20
Q

process gain vs process loss

A

Process Gain: when there is a more optimal outcome when working with a group

Process Loss: when there is a less optimal outcome when working with a group

21
Q

What was the outcome of the survival guide seminar

A

quantitative decisions are better solved in a group

but final yes/no decisions are better solved individually

separate group discussion and final verdict / like leaving it to the manager

22
Q
A