Euristic: What Is H
Euristic: What Is H
Euristic: What Is H
• It was during the 1950s that the Nobel-prize winning psychologist Herbert Simon suggested
that while people strive to make rational choices, human judgment is subject to cognitive
limitations. Purely rational decisions would involve weighing such factors as potential costs
against possible benefits.
• But people are limited by the amount of time they have to make a choice as well as the
amount of information we have at our disposal. Other factors such as overall intelligence
and accuracy of perceptions also influence the decision-making process.
• During the 1970s, psychologists Amos Tversky and Daniel Kahneman presented their
research on the cognitive biases. They proposed that these biases influence how people
think and the judgments people make.As a result of these limitations, we are forced to rely
on mental shortcuts to help us make sense of the world. Simon's research demonstrated that
humans were limited in their ability to make rational decisions, but it was Tversky and
Kahneman's work that introduced the specific ways of thinking people rely on to simplify
the decision-making process.
Common Uses
• In order to cope with the tremendous amount of information we encounter and to speed up the
decision-making process, the brain relies on these mental strategies to simplify things so we don't
have to spend endless amounts of time analyzing every detail.
• The world is full of information, yet our brains are only capable of processing a certain amount. If
you tried to analyze every single aspect of every situation or decision, you would never get anything
done.
• You probably make hundreds or even thousands of decisions every day. What should you have for
breakfast? What should you wear today? Should you drive or take the bus? Should you go out for
drinks later with your co-workers? The list of decisions you make each day is endless and varied.
Fortunately, heuristics allow you to make such decisions with relative ease without a great deal of
agonizing.
• For example, when trying to decide if you should drive or ride the bus to work, you might
suddenly remember that there is road construction along the bus route. You realize that this
might slow the bus and cause you to be late for work. So you leave earlier and drive to work on
an alternate route. Heuristics allow you to think through the possible outcomes quickly and
arrive at a solution.
Common Uses
• Heuristics play important roles in both problem-solving and decision-making.
When we are trying to solve a problem or make a decision, we often turn to
these mental shortcuts when we need a quick solution. Psychologists have
suggested a few different theories for the reasons that we rely on heuristics.
• Attribute substitution: Theories suggest people substitute simpler but
related questions in place of more complex and difficult questions.
• Effort reduction: According to this theory, people utilize heuristics as a type
of cognitive laziness. Heuristics reduce the mental effort required to make
choices and decisions.
• Fast and frugal: Still other theories argue that heuristics are actually more
accurate than they are biased. In other words, we use heuristics because they
are fast and usually correct.
How Heuristics Can Lead to Bias
• Just because something has worked in the past does not mean that it
will work again, and relying on an existing heuristic can make it
difficult to see alternative solutions or come up with new ideas.
• While heuristics can speed up our problem and the decision-making
process, they can introduce errors. As you saw in the examples above,
heuristics can lead to inaccurate judgments about how common things
occur and about how representative certain things may be.
• Heuristics can also contribute to things such as stereotypes and
prejudice.
• Because people use mental shortcuts to classify and categorize people,
they often overlook more relevant information and create stereotyped
categorizations that are not in tune with reality.
Types of Heuristics
• Availability heuristic
• Representative heuristic
• Affect heuristic
Affect Heuristics
• Like other heuristics, the availability heuristic can be useful at times. However, it can lead
to problems and errors. Reports of child abductions, airplane accidents, and train
derailments often lead people to believe that such events are much more typical than they
truly are.
• For example, after you see a movie about a nuclear disaster, you might become convinced
that a nuclear war or accident is highly likely. After seeing a car overturned on the side of
the road, you might believe that your own likelihood of getting in an accident is very high.
• Plus, the longer you stay preoccupied with the event, the more available it will be in your
mind and the more probable you will believe it to be. The problem is that certain events
tend to stand out in our minds more than others.
• Excessive media coverage can cause this to happen, but sometimes the novelty or drama
surrounding an event can cause it to become more available in your memory. Because the
event is so unusual, it takes on greater significance, which leads you to incorrectly assume
that the event is much more common than it really is.
Summary
• There are 3 things you should know about the availability
heuristic:
1.We often misjudge the frequency and magnitude of events that have
happened recently.
2.This happens, in part, because of the limitations on memory.
3.We remember things better when they come in a vivid narrative.
References
• An, S. (2008). Antidepressant direct-to-consumer advertising and social perception of the
prevalence of depression: Application of the availability heuristic. Health Communication,
23(6), 499-505.
• Folkes, V. S. (1988). The availability heuristic and perceived risk. Journal of Consumer
research, 15(1), 13-23.
• Ofir, C., Raghubir, P., Brosh, G., Monroe, K. B., & Heiman, A. (2008). Memory-based store
price judgments: the role of knowledge and shopping experience. Journal of Retailing,
84(4), 414-423.
• Poses, R. M., & Anthony, M. (1991). Availability, wishful thinking, and physicians’ diagnostic
judgments for patients with suspected bacteremia. Medical Decision Making, 11(3), 159-
168.
• Tversky, A., & Kahneman, D. (1974). Judgment under uncertainty: Heuristics and
biases. Science (New Series), 185, 1124-1131.
• Types of Heuristic
https://clikfocus.com/blog/12-types-of-heuristics