Title: Rationality
1Rationality IrrationalityorWhy are we so
foolish,and what can we do about it?
Present company excepted, of course.
2Rationality Irrationality
- Why are we so foolish?
- The rise and fall of rationality on cognitive
science - An introduction to inevitable illusions
- What can we do it about our foolishness?
3- It has been said that man is a rational
animal. All my life I have been searching for
evidence which could support this. - --Bertrand Russell / An Outline
of Intellectual Rubbish
4The rise and fall of human rationality
- (Some proponents of) Cognitive science had high
hopes of being a science of ideal rationality
when it emerged - The cleave between competence (computation) and
performance (biology) - This goal was stymied by evidence of
- Lack of general problem-solving methods
- (Over-)Compartmentalization of knowledge
- Context effects
- A growth industry in the study of systematic
human foolishness Cognitive illusions
5The rise and fall of rationality on cognitive
science
If no organic being excepting man had
possessed any mental power, or if his powers had
been of a wholly different nature from those of
the lower animals, then we should never have been
able to convince ourselves that our high
faculties had been gradually developed. But it
can be shewn that there is no fundamental
difference of this kind. We must also admit that
there is a much wider interval in mental power
between one of the lowest fishes, as a lamprey or
lancelet, and one of the higher apes, than
between an ape and man yet this interval is
filled up by numberless gradations. Charles
Darwin/ The Descent Of Man
6- The brain is constructed to find reward in
apparent solutions (coherence) which are not the
same as solutions (cf. Damasio, Cytowic, Bernard
not to mention those old philosophers, Ludwig
Wittgenstein Charles Peirce)
7Psychopaths could be best financial traders?
- This was a Reuters headline on September 19,
2005 - In a study of investors' behavior 41
people with normal IQs were asked to play a
simple investment game. Fifteen of the group had
suffered lesions on the areas of the brain that
affect emotions. - The result was those with brain
damage outperformed those without. - The scientists found emotions led
some of the group to avoid risks even when the
potential benefits far outweighed the losses, a
phenomenon known as myopic loss aversion.
8- Objective statistical frequency is one thing
the facility with which our imagination
represents certain events or situations, and our
emotional impressionability, are quite another. - Any probabilistic intuition by anyone not
specifically tutored in probability calculus has
a greater than 50 percent chance of being wrong. - M. Piattelli-Palmarini Inevitable Illusions
9Cognitive Illusion 1 Over-confidence
- We are not good at judging our own confidence
levels - We tend to systematically err on the high side,
and to resist attempts at correction - The error increases as we become more certain
- We institutionalize this error by demanding
certainty from our experts and instilling
certainty in them - Question Are there any good reasons to make this
demand?
10Cognitive Illusion 1 Over-confidence
- Fischoff, Slovic, Lichenstein (1977) Knowing
with Certainty The Appropriateness of Extreme
Confidence - Asked subjects to answer factual questions and
rate their certainty on the answers - For example
- The potato came from Ireland / Peru
- Kahlil Gibran was inspired by Buddhism /
Christianity - More people die from All accidents / Heart
attacks - A rational probability approach would tie
certainty to what measure?
11Cognitive Illusion 1 Over-confidence
- In fact, subjects judged their certainty
extremely high, with probabilities of being wrong
as low as one in a thousand or even one in a
million - This implies that they expected they would be
erroneous only one out of every thousand or
million questions asked (and that they consider
10001 odds that they are wrong as a fair bet)
12Cognitive Illusion 1 Over-confidence
- This over-confidence remained even when subjects
were debiased by extensive tutoring about
probability - The bias was increased when difficult questions
were removed, so that subjects had more knowledge - cf My friend Jim and I in the Lets Make A Deal
game - The more knowledgeable (and therefore accurate) a
person is, the more their over-confidence
increases
13Cognitive Illusion 2 Magical thinking
- We put great confidence in signs that derive from
folk beliefs illusory correlations - We will see some worrisome evidence of this in a
later reading in this class - Moreover, we look for evidence to support and
sustain an priori beliefs in correlations - We are easily taught to do so, even in the
absence of evidence or the presence of
counter-evidence - Cancer cell recognition Watzlawick
14Cognitive Illusion 2 Magical thinking
- If you have a cold, should you keep warm?
- If you are against sugar, should you drink fruit
juice instead of pop? - Is there any reason not to swim after eating?
- Is a black cat bad luck?
- Is it a sign from the heavens if it is sunny on
the day you are wed (cf. Pierre Trudeaus wife)?
15Cognitive Illusion 2 Magical thinking
- One specific problem is that we tend to
over-focus on true positive cases that is, if
A and B sometimes co-occur, that is good enough
for us to say they always go together - If two things always go together, then we can
deduce one from the other - So humans tend to make mistakes that mix up
correlation with causation or identity, often due
to a failure to understand probability - Frontal lobe spiking during sleep, and epilepsy
at the University Hospital
16Cognitive Illusion 2 Magical thinking
- A famous case (Wason Johnson-Laird)
- Which of four cards. with a drawing on one side
and a diagnosis on the other, do we need to turn
over to see if people suffering form persecution
delusions always make drawings with large eyes? - Card 1 A diagnosis of persecution mania.
- Card 2 A diagnosis of something else
- Card 3 A drawing with large eyes
- Card 4 A drawing with normal eyes.
17Cognitive Illusion 3 20/20 Hindsight
- The fact that something actually has happened is
taken to mean that - It had a high probability (or, more likely,
certainty) of happening - That we could/should have known this beforehand
- This is commonly seen in good and bad fortune
- I knew I was going to win before I pulled the
slot machine arm. - I always had a bad feeling about that guy you
just dumped.
18Cognitive Illusion 4 Anchoring
- We use initial reference points to anchor future
estimates - We do so even when those initial reference points
are (known to be) random - eg. The answer to How many African countries in
the UN? is demonstrably influenced by randomly
spinning a wheel in view of the subject
19Cognitive Illusion 4 Anchoring
- Anchoring is commonly used in obtaining
confessions if a person is accused of enough
outrageous crimes, they are more likely to admit
to lesser crimes
- Capturing The Friedmans as a psychometric
exercise
20Cognitive Illusion 4 Anchoring
- Anchoring is also used by propagandists by
downplaying bad things and up-playing good
things, they get people to change the set-point - The articles gives an example from Bush, Sr.,
whose Gulf War killed hundreds of thousands of
Iraqis - Bush, Jr. learned from his Daddy How many Iraqi
civilians have been killed in the current Iraqi
invasion? How many US soldiers are dead?
21Cognitive Illusion 4 Anchoring
- The same things is commonly used in advertising
Compare at 99! - You can also use it in bargaining Start really
high when selling and stupidly low when buying - It also accounts for first impressions and the
huge efforts we go to to manage them (e.g.
wearing a suit for a job interview!) - Think of people who happened to be drunk when you
first met them
22Cognitive Illusion 5 Availability Taking the
easy way out
- We will use an easier representation rather than
a more complex one - The easier it is to bring an event to mind, the
more likely we are to judge it as frequent (Uncle
Georges Pancakes fallacy) - This leads to under-estimation of what is
frequent (suicide) and over-estimation of what is
not (murder child abduction), and thereby
mis-estimations of coincidence
23Cognitive Illusion 5 Availability Taking the
easy way out
- The ease may be emotional More emotional
things are more available - ERP evidence shows that depressives find negative
statements less anomalous than non-depressed
subjects do - It may also be focused-based Colleagues who
perform well may assume that no one else did we
see hot streaks in players or games we follow
but not in others
24Cognitive Illusion 5 Availability Taking the
easy way out
- Homework Pick a random number (under 100 is
best) and be ready for coincidences in everyday
life about it. Report back to us. - 23 is a perennial favorite See Wikipedia 23
Enigma
25Cognitive Illusion 5 Availability Taking the
easy way out
- How to make yourself miserable A case study
26Cognitive Illusion 6 Probability blindness
- We dont equate equal probabilities (although the
Gods do!), especially at the extremes of the
probability range - We prefer an increase from 0.94 to 0.99 from one
to 0.38 to 0.42, or something which reduces risk
from 0.001 to 0 to something which reduces it
from 0.002 to 0.001 - We reduce probabilities to certainties
- We deny that population probabilities apply to
individual cases (Marcel Duchamp After all,
its always the others who die.) - We mis-estimate co-variation ---gt
27Covariation mis-estimation
From Arkes, Harkness, Biber (1980)
Question How strong is the relation between
symptom X and death? (How worried should you be,
on a scale of 1-100, if you have symptom X?)
28Cognitive Illusion 7 Story-telling(Reconsiderati
on under suitable scripts)
- We over-estimate the probability of coherent
fictions with many parts (conjunction illusion) - E.g. Subjects estimate that it is more likely
that the USSR would invade Poland the US would
subsequently withdraw its Soviet ambassador than
that one or the other would happen - But chains of events must be less probable than
their weakest link (assuming we have no absolute
certainty, which we never do).
29Cognitive Illusion 7 Story-telling(Reconsiderati
on under suitable scripts)
- Both research and real life observation tell us
that people find arguments more compelling when
they support what they already believe anyway. - Or they alter the story to fit what the believe
- E.g. Q Why would God do insert seemingly
unlikely Deistic behavior here? A To test our
faith.
30- Or they alter the story to fit what the believe
- I admire especially a certain prophetess
who lived beside a lake in Northern New York
State about the year 1820. She announced to her
numerous followers that she possessed the power
of walking on water, and that she proposed to do
so at 11 o'clock on a certain morning. At the
stated time, the faithful assembled in their
thousands beside the lake. She spoke to them,
saying "Are you all entirely persuaded that I
can walk on water?" With one voice they replied
"We are." "In that case," she announced, "there
is not need for me to do so." And they all went
home much edified. - Bertrand Russell
- An Outline of Intellectual Rubbish
- See also Penn Tellers Indian Rope Trick.
31Cognitive Illusion 7 Story-telling(Reconsiderati
on under suitable scripts)
- Story-telling is related to 20/20 hindsight we
can build hindsight by telling quasi-coherent
stories - Beware, politicians also know and use this
illusion! a few years ago they had a few hundred
million people believing it was sane to bomb Iraq
because of 9-11, despite the fact that no Iraqis
were involved in 9-11!
32What can we do about our foolishness?
- 1.) Distrust certainty Cultivate scepticism
joyously - Doubt is an uncomfortable condition, but
certainty is a ridiculous one. - Voltaire - The believer is happy the doubter is wise.
- - Greek Proverb
- 2.) Keep score Dont rely on your memory.
- - Keep clinical records, compile databases
consult them before you act. - 3.) Do the math.
- - Use Bayes Theorem run statistical tests
look at distribution shapes etc.
33What can we do about our foolishness? II
- 4.) Consider many plausible alternatives
- - Research shows that this reduces hind-sight
bias in some cases (re. Availability) - 5.) Watch out for the buddy-buddy syndrome
- The cognitive degradation and feckless
vocalization characteristic of committees are too
well-known to require comment. - Paul Meehl
34What can we do about our foolishness? III
- 6.) Dont weight all evidence equally ignore
irrelevancies - - Evidence must be differentially relevant
(distinguish between actual possibilities) to be
considered - - Barnum statements True of practically
everyone. - 7.) Distinguish between inclusion and exclusion
criteria - - Failure to have an accessory symptom of X is
not evidence against a diagnosis of X - 8.) Remember reliability bounds
- - An insignificant difference on a test result
is insignificant
35What can we do about our foolishness? IV
- 9.) Dont mistake soft-headedness for
soft-heartedness - 10.) Be courageous Speak up for rationality!
- - Dont be cowed by people who havent read or
understood Bayes Theorem etc. - - Insist on doing your job the right way, and
dont back down.
36- Questions etc.
- Coincidence example from Piatelli-Palmarini How
many people need we have in a room to have a 50
chance that two have the same birthday? - Is rationality always best?
- What is the role of authoritarianism in affecting
perceptual and moral judgments? - What is the effect of these inevitable illusions
in todays world of mass media? (Why might the
WWW both hinder and help rational analysis of
probabilities?) - How can we harness these illusions to foster
individual well being and social harmony (without
also fostering harmful delusion)?