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Problematic Judgments

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Title: Problematic Judgments


1
Problematic Judgments Cognitive Biases?????????
Mans mind is so formed that it is far more
susceptible to falsehood than to truth.
- Desiderius Erasmus (????,1466-1536)
  • Suggested Reading
  • How to Think About Weird Things, pp. 60-87.
  • Further Reference
  • http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cognitive_
    biases

2
Topics
  • Tests on Cognitive Biases
  • Problematic Judgment 1 Probabilities / Chances
  • Heuristic Bias Availability
  • Problematic Judgment 2 Subjective Validation
  • Confirmation Bias
  • Denying the Evidence Bias
  • Three More Cognitive Biases
  • Correspondence Bias / Fundamental Attribution
    Error
  • Heuristic Bias Representativeness
  • Heuristic Bias Anchoring Adjustment

3
Tests on Cognitive Biases??????
  • ???????????
  • ?? 1 ?????
  • ?? 2 ???
  • ?? 3 About Mary
  • ?? 4 ?????????

4
Problematic Judgment 1 Probabilities / Chances
(?? / ???)
  • A man who travels a lot was concerned about the
    possibility of a bomb on board his plane. He
    determined the probability of this, found it to
    be low but not low enough for him, so now he
    always travels with a bomb in his suitcase. He
    reasons that the probability of two bombs being
    on board would be infinitesimal.
  • John Allen Paulos, Innumeracy Mathematical
    Illiteracy and Its Consequences, p. 25.

5
  • How would you judge?
  • ???? 3-11-15-27-30-38 ?? 1-2-3-4-5-6?
  • ????????,??????!?
  • ???? (Gamblers fallacy)
  • ???? (The Birthday Problem)
  • ??????????????????????????????????? 0.5?
  • http//mathforum.org/dr.math/faq/faq.birthdayprob.
    html

6
  • Many seemingly unlikely events are actually (even
    highly) probable.
  • Prophetic dreams
  • Around 250 dream themes per night
  • Retrieval cues ????
  • Thinking of a person, then receiving her call or
    hearing news about her.
  • Aristotle It is likely that unlikely things
    should happen.
  • ??????
  • http//phil.arts.cuhk.edu.hk/wmkwok/science/file/
    small world.pdf

7
  • Email received on 24/1/2006
  • Year 1981 1. Prince Charles got married 2.
    Liverpool crowned soccer Champions of Europe 3.
    Australia lost the Ashes tournament. 4. Pope
    Died Year 20051. Prince Charles got married 2.
    Liverpool crowned soccer Champions of Europe 3.
    Australia lost the Ashes tournament 4. Pope Died
    Lesson Learned? - the next time Charles gets
    married, someone warn the Pope.
  • What do you think?

8
  • ?????????????
  • Apart from many other problems (e.g. vague
    language see subjective validation), one major
    problem of these predictions is that they are
    vast in number, and hence some are likely to be
    accurate.

9
Heuristic Bias Availability
  • ?????? (availability heuristic)
  • ??????(???????)????????
  • ?? ?????????
  • ????? (availability bias)
  • ???????????????
  • ??
  • ??????????????
  • ???????????
  • ??1 ?????

10
Critical Thinking Exercise A Coincidence or Not?
  • ???38.5??? ?????????
  • 2008?9?5???????
  • ????????!??????????,??????????????,??38.5?????????
    ??????,??????????????????????,???1000??????
    ??????,???????????????,??????????

11
  • 9?2???1??,?????????????????,????????,????100????,
    ??????????,??????????,????????????????????????????
    ?,???????,?????1000??????

12
Critical Thinking Exercise B Psychics
Predictions for 2002
  • Task Review the predictions below and try to
    answer the following questions
  • How accurate were they?
  • If all predictions in this sample are false, is
    that strong evidence that psychics predictions
    are generally false?
  • Can you give predictions for 2009 that have a
    good chance of being true?

13
  • Sources
  • AA www.aquarius-atlanta.com/
  • JC www.johncappello.com/
  • GP www.globalpsychics.com/
  • LD http//www.lyndadoyle.com/
  • Terrorism
  • Terrorists will resort to germ and/or chemical
    acts against the USA soon.The total losses from
    domestic terrorist acts in the USA will exceed
    the losses incurred on September 11, 2001. (LD)

14
  • at least two other major terrorist attacksmay
    occur Times Square on New Year's Eve and
    Chicagothe President and his family,
    particularly his wife. (AA)
  • I see another big attack coming towards the US
    and one possibly in Britain. (AA)
  • Osama bin Laden will turn on the people he has
    been leading and eventually be killed by these
    men before November of 2002. (AA)
  • I feel that Osama Bin Laden and Mullah Omar will
    be found this year. (JC)

15
  • International Politics
  • The United States shall maintain a focus on
    Afghanistan as it becomes an important country
    for the U.S. in the Middle East. (AA)
  • I have had a vision that the State of Israel is
    stockpiling materials and purchasing land in
    another area of the world to start a second
    Israeli state.This new State will be kept secret
    for awhile longer and will be revealed in later
    years. (JC)

16
  • World Leaders
  • There could be an assassination attempt on Bush
    late in the year. (GP)
  • A new Pope will be elected within 12-16 months.
    (LD)
  • U.S. Vice President Cheney will experience
    another major health crisis and may not survive.
    There is a strong possibility of one, perhaps two
    White House funerals. (AA)

17
  • Science and Medicine
  • There shall be the first possible viable contact
    with an alien sapient species through SETI as
    they establish the existence of sentient radio
    waves coming from another planetary system. (AA)
  • A new drug will be discovered that will equal
    Penicillin in scope and importance and the
    discoverera man with short white hairwill be
    awarded the Nobel Prize. (AA)

18
  • New uses shall be found for crystals and sand in
    the development of new methods for generating
    energy. (AA)
  • Weather
  • There shall be flooding in unusual parts of
    the globe and an Earthquake shall rock the
    eastern seaboard of the United States. (AA)
  • Could these have failed to be true?
  • Money will be asked for health care in all parts
    of the world. (GP)
  • Anger, frustration and jealousies will lead to
    outbursts. (AA)

19
  • More references
  • Psychic Predictions 2005
  • A critique on psychic predictions for 2005
  • http//www.csicop.org/specialarticles/predictions-
    2005.html
  • The High Weirdness Project
  • http//www.modemac.com/cgi-bin/wiki.pl/Psychic_Pre
    dictions_for_2007
  • http//www.modemac.com/cgi-bin/wiki.pl/Psychic_Pre
    dictions_for_2008

20
Problematic Judgment 2 Subjective Validation
(????)
  • Our beliefs are not automatically updated by the
    best evidence available. They often have an
    active life of their own and fight tenaciously
    for their own survival.
  • D. Marks R. Kammann (Weird Things, p. 56)

21
  • Common mistreatments of evidences by people with
    the problem of subjective validation
  • Tend to ignore negative evidences to their
    subjectively preferred beliefs.
  • Tend to exaggerate positive evidences to them.
  • Tend to interpret vague evidences in an
    unreasonable way so that they seem to support
    them.

22
???? Confirmation Bias
It is the peculiar and perpetual error of the
human understanding to be more moved and excited
by affirmatives than by negatives. - Francis
Bacon (1561-1626)
  • ????????????,????????????
  • ?? 2 ???
  • ?? http//www.devpsy.org/teaching/method/confirma
    tion_bias.html
  • ??
  • http//skepdic.com/confirmbias.html

23
(No Transcript)
24
????????? ??????
25
  • ????????

26
??????Denying the Evidence Bias
  • ??? (Max Planck) ???
  • A new scientific truth does not triumph by
    convincing its opponents and making them see the
    light, but rather because its opponents
    eventually die, and a new generation grows up
    that is familiar with it.

27
  • ?????? (Millerites) ???
  • William Miller?1818?????? (the Book of Daniel)
    ?????
  • ?1843-1844????????
  • ??? ?????? (the Adventist movement) ??????? (the
    Jehovahs Witnesses)
  • Weird Things, p. 61
  • ??
  • ???????
  • ????????

28
  • Subjective validation example 1 The Forer Effect
  • If told that a vague general personality
    description is written specifically about them,
    people tend to agree that the description is
    accurate!
  • Vague description - allow many possible
    interpretations
  • General description - true for many or even most
    people
  • People notice aspects of themselves that match
    the description and ignore aspects that dont
  • What about the following description?

29
  • Some of your aspirations tend to be pretty
    unrealistic. At times you are extroverted,
    affable, sociable, while at other times you are
    introverted, wary and reserved. You have found it
    unwise to be too frank in revealing yourself to
    others. You pride yourself on being an
    independent thinker and do not accept others
    opinions without satisfactory proof. You prefer a
    certain amount of change and variety, and become
    dissatisfied when hemmed in by restrictions and
    limitations. At times you have serious doubts as
    to whether you have made the right decision or
    done the right thing. Disciplined and controlled
    on the outside, you tend to be worrisome and
    insecure on the inside (Weird Things, p. 63)

30
Critical Thinking Exercise Accurate Description?
  • ??????????? 12??2007?????
  • http//phil.arts.cuhk.edu.hk/wmkwok/science/file/
    2007_fortune.pdf

31
  • Subjective validation example 2 Prophecies (??)
  • Similar problems, e.g.
  • Exaggerate ve evidences while ignore ve ones.
  • Biases in interpreting vague prophecies
  • Case Study Nostradamus (???????, 150366)
  • Wrote lots of very vague prophetic poems, to
    which Nostradamus experts have different
    interpretations.

32
  • Example the only one that contains an
    unambiguous date reference
  • In the year 1999 and seven monthsFrom the sky
    will come the great King of TerrorHe will bring
    back to life the great king of the Mongols
    Before and after war reigns happily. (X 72)
  • Some interpretations before July 1999
  • End of the world
  • World revolution
  • An interpretation after July 1999
  • Crash of John F. Kennedy Jr.s airplane!
  • Other interpretations?

33
  • Another example
  • From the human flock nine will be sent
    awaySeparated from judgment and counselTheir
    fate will be sealed on departureKappa, Theta,
    Lambda the banished dead err.
  • Believers interpretation (after 28 Jan. 1986)
  • Explosion of space shuttle Challenger
  • 7, not 9 died!

34
  • Did Nostradamus predict the Sept. 11, 2001
    terrorist attack on New York?
  • Some referred to these lines
  • In the year 1999 and seven months From the sky
    will come the great King of Terror (X.72)
  • At forty-five degrees the sky will burn. Fire to
    approach the great new cityIn an instant a
    great scattered flame will leap up,When one will
    want to demand proof of the Normans. (VI.97)

35
  • Convinced?
  • 45? (New York is at 4047' N)
  • Other criticisms?
  • A better one?
  • In the city of God there will be a great thunder,
    Two brothers torn apart by Chaos, while the
    fortress endures, the great leader will succumb,
    The third big war will begin when the big city is
    burning Nostradamus 1654

36
  • Suggested references Articles on Nostradamus
    from Skeptical Inquirer, e.g.
  • The AntinoĆ¼s Prophecies A Nostradamoid Project
  • May/June 2001, by Clifford A. Pickover
  • The prophecies of Nostradamus are said to
    foretell events centuries in his future. Are the
    prophecies merely verbal ink blots to which
    humans "fit" events? Here's a test using random
    simulations.

37
  • Letters to the Editor
  • Sept/Oct 2001, by Jean-Claude Pecker
  • The poems of Nostradamus may describe past, not
    future events. They were written in coded
    French to avoid political consequences.
  • Nostradamus's Clever Clairvoyance The Power
    of Ambiguous Specificity
  • Sept/Oct 2003, by Maziar Yafeh Chip Heath
  • How did a French astrologer, dead for over 400
    years, become a premier commentator on world
    events in 2001? The authors' research shows that
    Nostradamus's dark prophecies are ambiguous
    enough to "work" for events selected at random
    and even when they are scrambled.

38
Three More Cognitive Biases
  • Correspondence Bias (????) / Fundamental
    Attribution Error (??????)
  • Heuristic Bias Representativeness (??????
    ???)
  • Heuristic Bias Anchoring Adjustment (??????
    ?????)

39
???? / ??????
  • ????????????????????,???????????
  • ????
  • ?????
  • ????????
  • ???????

????????? ??????
40
?????? ???
  • ?????? (representativeness heuristic)
  • ???????????????
  • ??
  • ????
  • ????
  • ????? (representativeness bias)
  • ?? 3 About Mary

41
?????? ?????
  • ???????? (anchoring adjustment)
  • ??????????? (anchoring),?????????? (adjustment)
    ???????
  • ? ????????????
  • ?? ??????????
  • ?? 4 ?????????
  • ?????
  • ???????
  • ????????????

42
Critical Thinking Exercise
  • Do you have problems in judgments or cognitive
    biases?
  • If no, are you sure?
  • If yes, what specific problems? Do you think that
    your life would be significantly improved if they
    could be fixed?
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