Judgement & Decision Making Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 3 things involved in judgement?

A

Minimising cognitive effect
Perseverance of false beliefs
Cognitive biases

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2
Q

What 3 areas were studies in the area of decision making?

A

Decision frames
Risk strategies
Optimistic bias

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3
Q

What is the definition of judgement?

A

The process by which we form opinions, reach conclusions, and make critical evaluations of people and events on the basis of available information

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4
Q

What is the definition of decision making?

A

The process of choosing between alternatives, selecting and rejecting available options

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5
Q

What is the main difference between judgements and decisions?

A

Judgements are generally spontaneous and automatic but decision making is generally controlled and deliberate

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6
Q

What is an inference?

A

The reasoning process of drawing a conclusion on the basis of a sample of evidence or on the basis of a sample of prior beliefs and theories. Our schemas are an example of a process that helps guide our judgements

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7
Q

What can bias or create errors in our judgements or decisions?

A

Past experiences an inferences

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8
Q

We are cognitive misers; what does this mean?

A

We attempt to process information with minimum mental effort, so we tend to use the minimal, most salient information from our past experiences in order to construct our judgements

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9
Q

What 2 effects does taking shortcuts have on our judgements?

A

Over-generalising

Stereotyping

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10
Q

Are initial impressions persistent or not to change?

A

persistent and resistent to change

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11
Q

What 2 processes are involved when you merge your initial judgement and additional information?

A

Assimilation or

Accommodation

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12
Q

What is assimilation?

A

Fitting new data (a person or situation) within existing theories (stereotypes about the person or situation) e.g. he’s only being nice to lull me into a false sense of security

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13
Q

What is accommodation?

A

Changing the stereotype to incorporate new information

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14
Q

Which is more common and easier for us to compute, assimilation or accommodation?

A

Assimilation

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15
Q

What does our steadfast belief in our formed stereotypes tend to lead to?

A

Overconfidence in our beliefs and an underestimate in our probability of being wrong

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16
Q

If you were overly confident about completing your assessment in two days time even though its probably unlikely, what would this be known as?

A

Optimistic Bias

e.g. smokers deem themselves less likely than others who smoke to be at risk

17
Q

What are cognitive biases?

A

fitting new data (a person or situation) within existing theories (stereotypes about the person or situation)

18
Q

Judgements and decisions are often made on the basis of _______ rather than _________ __________ information

A

intuition

objective statistical

19
Q

What are two common errors?

A

perceiving random events as non-random e.g. bad luck

perceiving correlated events as causally related

20
Q

What is anchoring bias?

A

The insufficient judgement — up or down — from an original starting value when judging the probable value of some event or outcome

21
Q

What is the availability heuristic?

A

Judging events that are more readily imagined or retrieved from memory, as more frequent or probable
e.g. do more people die of AIDS or asthma?

22
Q

What is the representative heuristic?

A

Belonging to a particular category implies having the characteristics considered typical of members of that category
e.g. assuming two people will have the same personality because they look the same

23
Q

What is base-rate information?

A

the statistical probability of a given outcome or an accumulated body of knowledge

24
Q

What is the opposite of a stereotype?

A

base-rate information

25
Q

What are decision frames?

A

The way a problem is presented

E.g. medical risk viewed from either a survival frame or a mortality frame

26
Q

When do people choose differently when assessing risk?

A

When they’re gaining something or when they’re losing something