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A remote mountain village of 600 inhabitants is suffering from a lethal plague. The results of two treatment plans, A and B, are given below. Plan A: There.

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Presentation on theme: "A remote mountain village of 600 inhabitants is suffering from a lethal plague. The results of two treatment plans, A and B, are given below. Plan A: There."— Presentation transcript:

1 A remote mountain village of 600 inhabitants is suffering from a lethal plague. The results of two treatment plans, A and B, are given below. Plan A: There is a 100% chance that exactly 200 people survive the plague. Plan B: There is a 33% chance that all 600 people survive the plague. There is a 67% chance that no one survives the plague.

2 A remote mountain village of 600 inhabitants is suffering from a lethal plague. The results of two treatment plans, One and Two, are given below. Plan One: There is a 100% chance that exactly 400 people will die. Plan Two: There is a 33% chance that no one will die. There is a 67% chance that all 600 people die.

3 1+2 does not equal 2+1 The Framing Effect and Human Decision Making

4 Pre 1979: Expected Utility The only logical outcome... Risk Guarantee: low return, high probability Gamble: high return, low probability Probability Comparison: (Value)(Probability)=Util ity Decisi on

5 Kahneman and tversky Logically examining illogical choices Daniel Kahneman Amos Tversky images from http://grawemeyer.org/psychology/previous-winners/2003-daniel-kahneman-and-amos- tversky.html Phenomena unexplained by Utility Theory: --Why spend more money on insurance to protect your valuables than the expected utility of their (Value)(Probability of damage/theft) function? --How can the same person choose a hugely uncertain possible gain (i.e. a lottery ticket) and be willing to spend a certain small sum of money to avoid possible future loss (i.e. insurance premiums)? --Why do some investors continue to pour money into failing business ventures even after it is apparent they cannot recoup their losses?

6 Biases and Heuristic s Prospect THEORY The impact of your status quo Risk Guarantee: low return, high probability Gamble: high return, low probability Probability Comparison: (Value)(Probability)=Util ity Decisi on Perception of Gamble: Gain or Loss? Gain: Risk Seeking Loss: Risk Averse

7 Framing effect No matter how you cut it, 1/2 is still 1/2... Perception of Gamble: Gain? Loss? Gain: Risk Seeking Loss: Risk Averse How do you feel about: --A medical procedure that has a 90% chance of saving a loved one’s life? How about one with a 1/10 chance of failure? --Birth control that is effective 19/20 times? Birth control that has a 5% failure rate?

8 my hypothesis A population of college-aged students, when presented with two logically identical options with opposite framings, will be risk averse when the certain outcome is presented as a loss and risk-seeking when the certain outcome is presented as a gain. Further, males, stereotypically more risk-seeking, will choose the riskier option more often, regardless of the framing of the two options.

9 A remote mountain village of 600 inhabitants is suffering from a lethal plague. The results of two treatment plans, A and B, are given below. Plan A: There is a 100% chance that exactly 200 people survive the plague. (Certain outcome: gain) Plan B: There is a 33% chance that all 600 people survive the plague. There is a 67% chance that no one survives the plague. (Gamble: loss) A remote mountain village of 600 inhabitants is suffering from a lethal plague. The results of two treatment plans, A and B, are given below. Plan A: There is a 100% chance that exactly 400 people will die. (Certain outcome: loss) Plan B: There is a 33% chance that no one will die. There is a 67% chance that all 600 people die. (Gamble: gain) POS NEG

10 Summary Sheet: Response Data Grouped by Framing without Gender Framing Number and (Percentage) of Respondents Selecting Plan A Number and (Percentage) of Respondents Selecting Plan B Total Number of Respondents in Gender Category POS33 (77%)10 (23%)43 NEG20 (48%)22 (52%)42

11 TABLE 2: MALE RESPONSES TO THE ISOLATED VILLAGE PROBLEM CATEGORIZED BY POS/NEG FRAMING FramePlan APlan BTotal POS15621 NEG91221 Total241842

12 TABLE 3: FEMALE RESPONSES TO THE ISOLATED VILLAGE PROBLEM CATEGORIZED BY POS/NEG FRAMING FramePlan APlan BTotal POS18422 NEG111021 Total241842

13 results Framing effect has a significant effect on the decision- making of the sampled population (p<0.01). If the certain outcome is perceived as a gain, no one is willing to take a risk. If the same certain outcome is perceived as a loss, risk-seeking behavior becomes prevalent. Males chose the riskier treatment plan more frequently than females, though not at levels of statistical significance (likely due to small sample size).

14 Bibliography Byrnes, James; Miller, David; Schafer, William. “Gender Differences in Risk Taking: A Meta- Analysis.” Psychological Bulletin. 1999: 367, 377-379. www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=1&ved=0CDMQFjAA&url=http://www.researchgate.net/publication/232541633_Gender_differences_in_risk_taking_A_meta- analysis/file/e0b49514c47ab0f093.pdf&ei=qqltUs7nPJG34AP6gYGgDg&usg=AFQjCNEZ-OL-gaBptmTJAXHERx1R05-Wow&sig2=M4d8Lvchi3y-kSrimPlgZA&bvm=bv.55123115,d.dmgl=http://www.researchgate.net/publication/232541633_Gender_differences_in_risk_taking_A_meta- analysis/file/e0b49514c47ab0f093.pdf&ei=qqltUs7nPJG34AP6gYGgDg&usg=AFQjCNEZ-OL-gaBptmTJAXHERx1R05-Wow&sig2=M4d8Lvchi3y-kSrimPlgZA&bvm=bv.55123115,d.d Kernan, Nancy et al. “An Analysis of 462 Transplantations from Unrelated Donors Facilitated by the National Marrow Donor Program.” The New England Journal of Medicine. Mar 4 1993: 593, 600. http://www.nejm.org/doi/pdf/10.1056/NEJM199303043280901http://www.nejm.org/doi/pdf/10.1056/NEJM199303043280901 Myers, David. Social Psychology. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill, 2013. Tversky, Amos and Kahneman, Daniel. “Prospect Theory: An Analysis of Decision Under Risk.” Econometrica. Mar 1979: 47-2. http://www.hss.caltech.edu/~camerer/Ec101/ProspectTheory.pdf http://www.hss.caltech.edu/~camerer/Ec101/ProspectTheory.pdf Tversky, Amos and Kahneman, Daniel. “The Framing of Decisions and Psychology of Choice.” Science. Jan 30 1981: 1-2. http://psych.hanover.edu/classes/cognition/papers/tversky81.pdfhttp://psych.hanover.edu/classes/cognition/papers/tversky81.pdf Verhoef, Lia; De Haan, Anton; Van Daal, William. “Risk Attitude in Gambles with Years of Life: Empirical Support for Prospect Theory [Abstract].” Medical Decision Making. 1993: 1. http://mdm.sagepub.com/content/14/2/194.abstract. http://mdm.sagepub.com/content/14/2/194.abstract


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