Monday, 25 August 2014

Is Heuristics misleading your Judgements?


I recollect a poem during my school days where the little girl finds it difficult to remember 6 multiplied by 9 while learning a table of 6. So she creates a mental shortcut and says 6 multiplied by 9 is ‘doll’. And assigns 54 to a doll. During exams she remembers ‘doll’ and forgets 54.

Does this happen to you and me? We try to use mental shortcuts basis our experience and some-times they go wrong.

Here is a small and interesting situation for you to solve. And you just have 5 seconds to solve it.

 
A bat & a ball costs Rs. 110

Bat costs Rs. 100 more than the ball

How much does the ball cost?
 

What answer did you give? Mostly it must have been Rs. 10/-.

There are some mental calculation we did, used some shortcuts basis our previous learning and experience and arrived at a solution, right?

 

An easy puzzle that evokes an answer that is intuitive, appealing and wrong.

 

Check again. The right answer is Rs. 5/-.

 

Note: I converted the original example into Indian rupees. The original example is $ 1.10 used by noble laureate (Economics) Dr. Daniel Kahneman & Shane Fredrick while working on theory of judgement.

       
Here are some more situations :
 

·         Wife gets a dress for herself and asks her husband to guess the price. If the husband quotes the price that is higher than the purchase price, he had it. He needs to be smart enough to tell the price lower than the purchase price and get dumbed at a smart bargain the wife made while buying the dress. This by the way can be a good secret for a happy married life!!!

·         Do you feel having more onions and tomatoes when their supply shortens and the prices go up?

·         If you invest in stock market, does it happen to you that when the prices of shares start moving up, you tend to buy more?

·         Have you splurged money in the mall due the irresistible offer(s) (never before; never after types) and got reprimanded even from your little daughter for the childish behaviour?

 

If all of it or some of it is true, welcome to Heuristics.

 
Heuristics are simple, efficient rules which people often use to form judgements and to make decisions. They are mental shortcuts that usually involve focussing on one aspect of a complex problem and ignoring others.

Put in other words Heuristics (Greek word meaning ‘to discover’) is an approach to problem solving that takes one’s personal experience into account.
 

Heuristic conclusions are faster and speedier since they are based on your experiences but they may not be accurate. These rules work well in most of the cases but can lead to systematic errors as we have seen with the bat & ball example earlier.

 Heuristics has found applications in many fields. One of them is behavioural finance or behavioural economics etc.

Did you notice that Rs.799/- shirt or a she appeared costing much lesser than Rs. 800/-?  Many companies have since long used this method to draw attention and improve sales.

In 2008, researchers at the University of Southern Brittany monitored a local pizza restaurant that was serving 5 types of pizzas at €8 each. When one of the pizzas was reduced to the price of € 7.99, its share of sales rose from one third of total sale to half of the total sale. Dropping the price by one cent, an insignificant amount in monetary terms, was enough to influence customers’ decisions dramatically.

 

So what do we do?

 It’s exciting to use intuition while making decisions. Exciting because it allows us to access the experience of the past and basis that jump to conclusions. It’s fast. Allows us eliminate the steps. However it can also be misleading. Hence we need to classify the activities that we can afford to go wrong at the cost of speed and use our intuition. Dr. Daniel Kahneman calls this the system 1 thinking. For the other activities a slow, deliberate, thinking mode can be used. Even if it means more efforts and relatively longer time. Dr. Daniel Kahneman calls this as System 2 thinking.

 

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