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What is the role of recognition in decision making? Ben Newell University College London & Centre for Economic Learning & Social Evolution Acknowledgements:

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Presentation on theme: "What is the role of recognition in decision making? Ben Newell University College London & Centre for Economic Learning & Social Evolution Acknowledgements:"— Presentation transcript:

1 What is the role of recognition in decision making? Ben Newell University College London & Centre for Economic Learning & Social Evolution Acknowledgements: David Shanks, Nicola Weston, Tim Rakow Funding: ESRC, Leverhulme Trust

2 Role of recognition in a cue- learning task Previous work examined empirical evidence for building blocks of fast & frugal heuristics (e.g., search, stopping, decision rules) in menu-based tasks Natural extension – examine evidence for fundamental ‘building block’ – the use of recognition

3 What do we mean by recognition? Distinction between the truly novel and the previously experienced E.g. nonwords – “prache”, “elbonics” Repetition of nonwords makes them recognisable How much ‘weight’ is placed on simple recognition?

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5 Status of Recognition Information Proportion of trials on which recognized company chosen Proportion of trials on which advice is purchased Special RH = RLRH = RL < NR Consistent with other cues RH > RLNR = RH < RL RH = Recognition High (recognition best predictor of company performance) RL = Recognition Low (recognition poorest predictor of company performance) NR = No Recognition (Free advisor informational equivalent of RH)

6 Choices in accord with recognition Predictions: “special” RH = RL = 1.0; “consistent” RH > RL

7 Advice Purchase Predictions: “special” RH = RL (=0) < NR; “consistent” NR = RH < RL

8 Compensatory use of cues Evidence for compensatory cue use in all conditions, most in RL

9 Conclusions Recognition information not ascribed “special status” in cue learning task Treated as ‘just another cue’ in the environment (cf.,PROBEX Juslin & Persson 2002) What about inferences from memory – do these rely on a ‘different sort of recognition’?

10 Recognition, Availability, Familiarity……. Powerful influences on inferences from memory Availability Heuristic (Kahneman & Tversky) “Overnight Fame” effect (Jacoby) Recognition Heuristic (Goldstein & Gigerenzer) No RecognitionRecognition + Availability (ease of recall) Recognition

11 Recognition Heuristic Adaptive, non-compensatory, “all or nothing” use of recognition – “no other information is searched for” Cities task with football team information When is such a rule applied? What are the consequences…..?

12 “Paying for the name…….”

13 Paying for the name….. Hoyer & Brown (1990) – 3 brands of peanut butter, – “Aware group”:1 known, 2 unknown brands – 5 trials, opportunity to sample after each choice Support for use of brand recognition in choice of peanut butter (DVD’s, computers, cars…….??) % of participants choose known brand Explicit (sole) use of brand awareness ‘heuristic’ Trial 193.5%60% Trial 574.5%17%

14 Paying for the name….. Hoyer & Brown (1990) contd…. Comparison with “No Awareness” group Significantly more sampling of brands in No Awareness group AND Awareness/quality-difference manipulation showed: Reliance on Brand Awareness heuristic led to decreased search and final choice of inferior alternative % of participants chose high quality brand when in an ‘unknown brand’ jar Brand Awareness20% No Awareness59%

15 “A good name is better than riches” (?) Borges et al. (1999) – can “ignorance” beat the stock market? 180 German lay-people recognition of German stocks 6 month return on DAX 30: Dec 1996 – Jun 1997 Result replicated in 6 out of 8 tests Conclusion – ignorance can beat the stock market or big firms do well in strong bull (up) markets? Market IndexRec > 90%Rec < 10% +34%+47%+13%

16 “A good name is better than riches” (?) Boyd (2001) – test in a down or ‘bear market’ 184 US students recognition of 111 companies randomly selected from Standard & Poor’s 500 6 month return: June 2000 – December 2000 No evidence to support use of recognition heuristic in a ‘bear’ market Borges et al result a ‘big firm’ effect? Market IndexRec > 90%Rec < 10% -4.54%-14.75%+16.27%

17 “A good name is better than riches” (?) Rakow (2002) – further test in a strong market 53 UK students recognition of 30 companies in Italian Mib 30 8 week return: October – December 2002 Compared recognition portfolios, anti-recognition portfolios and expert portfolio with market index Only 7 out of 53 recognition portfolios outperformed market index How robust is recognition heuristic as an investment tool? Market IndexExpertRecognition Portfolio Anti-Recognition Portfolio +21.0% +13.3%+26.2%

18 When will recognition be accurate…? It depends on the domain….. f(n) = 2(n / N) (N - n / N -1)  + (N – n / N) (N – n – 1 / N – 1) ½ + (n / N) (n – 1 / N – 1)  f(n) = proportion correct inferences  = recognition validity  =knowledge validity N = reference class of objects n = recognized objects (fast and frugal?)

19 Deliberate or automatic? Automatic ‘feeling of familiarity’ + deliberate application of heuristic? “I recognise it so I’ll choose it” – deliberate selection and use of a heuristic from the toolbox? (cf., Kahneman & Frederick, 2002) Recognition + “relevance check”. Enron?

20 Conclusions Cue learning: recognition treated like other cues in the environment Consumer research:Exploitation of reliance on recognition Stock market investment: ‘big firm’ rather than recognition effect – how generalisable?

21 Where to next? Further tests of use of recognition in memory-based inference Cost/benefit effects on use of recognition Discussion of adaptive/maladaptive use of recognition Further specification of the domains in which the ‘recognition heuristic’ applies


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