Title: David Ball
1YTY SeminarRadioactive waste - Risk and
SocietyUniversity of KuopioNovember 2005
Developing policy trends towards involving
society in decision making
- David Ball
- Centre for Decision Analysis Risk Management
- Middlesex University
- London, UK
- D.Ball_at_mdx.ac.uk
2Phineas Gage
3Trends in decision making.
USA 1983
USA 1996
4Trends in decision making.
UK 1983
UK 1992
5Ref. Baruch Fischhoff, Risk Analysis (1995),
15(2), 137-145.
6Features of the trend.
Up to the 1980s decisions about technical matters
were regarded, without question, as the domain of
experts In the 1990s decisions about technical
matters were beginning to be regarded as not
purely technical at all, and incorporated
uncertainty and value judgements In the 2000s
input from stakeholders and the wider public is
regarded as sine qua non, as are openness and
transparency
7Justifications for broadening participation in
risk regulation 1. Normative rationale. Risk
regulation is not a value-free activity and
therefore it is necessary for moral and
democratic reasons
8- Justifications for broadening participation in
risk regulation - 1. Normative rationale. Risk regulation is not a
value-free activity and therefore it is necessary
for moral and democratic reasons - Epistemic rationale. Drawing on wider knowledge
reduces the chance of policy error
9- Justifications for broadening participation in
risk regulation - 1. Normative rationale. Risk regulation is not a
value-free activity and therefore it is necessary
for moral and democratic reasons - Epistemic rationale. Drawing on wider knowledge
reduces the chance of policy error - Instrumental rationale. Increases the chance of
implementing your chosen policy option.
10- A plethora of techniques for public engagement
- focus groups
- opinion polls
- citizens panels and juries
- round tables
- analytic-deliberative methods
- et cetera
11- In the UK, it is being applied to major issues
like - control of BSE and scrapie in animals
- issues around GM crops
- nuclear waste
- In the name of
- putting consumers first
- being open and accessible
12But is it that easy?
13Ref Henry Rothstein (2004), Public
Administration, 82(4), 857-881.
14Emerging counter arguments - information and
power imbalances between stakeholders is
difficult to deal with. What looks like an
extension of democracy may be the reverse -
decisions may involve complex trade-offs between
different policy areas leading to
disenchantment - conclusions reached in
participative forums may have to bow to external
requirements e.g. EU or supra-national, more
disenchantment - greater transparency can
increase fear - might open the door to junk
science
15Insights from psychology and decision research
Phineas Gage
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17There is no dearth of evidence in everyday life
that people apprehend reality in two
fundamentally different ways, one variously
labeled intuitive, automatic, natural,
non-verbal, narrative, and experiential, and the
other analytical, deliberative, verbal, and
rational. Seymour Epstein 1994, p. 710
18Risk As Analysis vs. Risk as Feelings
Analytic/ Deliberative
Experiential/ Affective
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20- Reliance on Feelings Increases With
- Innumeracy
- Cognitive Load
- complexity of task information
- amount of information
- memory demands
- Stress
- time pressure
- pain
- poor health
- Older age
- Affect rich outcomes images
- evaluable information displays
21AFFECT - Affective images
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23AFFECT is not the only factor to influences our
decisions 1. Evaluability
24Attributes of Two Dictionaries in Hsees Study
Source Adapted from Hsee (1998)
25Affect, Evaluability and Attractiveness of Simple
Gambles
- Mean attractiveness
- (0-20 scale)
- 9.4
- 14.3
- Gamble 1. 7/36 chance to win 9
- Otherwise win nothing
- Gamble 2. 7/36 chance to win 9
- 29/36 chance to lose 5
- Attractiveness is determined by probability in
Gamble 1. The 9 payoff is not evaluable and
carries little weight. - In gamble 2, 9 comes alive with feeling as a
very attractive outcome compared to the small
loss. It then carries weight in the judgment.
262. Numeracy
27Numeracy in UO undergraduate sample (Slovic)
28The ability to understand numbers will influence
- The precision of feelings about probabilistic
information - The extent to which affect influences choices
293. Probability and Relative Frequency
- Are they the same or different in communicating
risk? - e.g. 1 chance
- vs.
- 1 out of 100
30RISK COMMUNICATION A patient Mr. James Jones
has been evaluated for discharge from an acute
civil mental health facility where he has been
treated for the past several weeks. A
psychologist whose professional opinion you
respect has done a state-of-the-art assessment of
Mr. Jones. Among the conclusions reached in the
psychologists assessment is the
following EITHER Patients similar to Mr.
Jones are estimated to have a 20 probability of
committing an act of violence to others during
the first several months after discharge.
OR Of every 100 patients similar to Mr.
Jones, 20 are estimated to commit an act of
violence to others during the first several
months after discharge.
31 Question
- If you were working as a supervisor at this
mental health facility and received the
psychologists report, would you recommend that
Mr. Jones be discharged from the hospital at the
present time?
324. Intuitive Toxicology Main Result
Many people lack dose-response sensitivity for
exposure to chemicals that can produce effects
that are dreaded, such as cancer (high
affect). If large exposures are bad, small
exposures are also bad.
335. Terrorism and Probability NeglectCass R.
SunsteinThe Journal of Risk and Uncertainty,
26(2/3) 121-136, 2003
- People are prone to . . . probability neglect,
especially when their emotions are intensely
engaged. Probability neglect is highly likely in
the aftermath of terrorism. People fall victim
to probability neglect if and to the extent that
the intensity of their reaction does not greatly
vary even with large differences in the
likelihood of harm. When probability neglect is
at work, peoples attention is focused on the bad
outcome itself, and they are inattentive to the
fact that it is unlikely to occur.
34From Sunstein, 2003
- In the context of the terrorist attacks of
September 11, 2001, . . ., public fear led to
private and public costs that were orders of
magnitude higher than the costs of the attacks
themselves, and that are best explained in part
by reference to probability neglect. The same
might be said about the extraordinary public fear
produced by the sniper attacks in the
Washington, D.C. area in October 2002 the extent
of the fear is hard to understand without an
appreciation of probability neglect.
356. Insensitivity to the Value of Human Life
- I am deeply moved if I see one man suffering
and would risk my life for him. Then I talk
impersonally about the possible pulverization of
our big cities, with a hundred million dead. I
am unable to multiple one mens suffering by a
hundred million. - Albert Szent Gyorgi
367. Proportion dominance
The proportion of lives saved carries more
affective meaning than the number of lived
saved For example, in separate evaluations there
will likely be more support for saving 80 of 100
lives at risk than saving 20 of 1000 lives at
risk.
37A Study of Proportion Dominance (Slovic)
Airport Safety Imagine you are a member of
the emergency response committee of the Eugene
Airport. There is a proposal before your
committee to purchase some expensive new
equipment for use in the event of a crash landing
of an airliner. The circumstances that might
require such equipment to be used are rare but
important. It is estimated that, over a 10
year period, there is about 1 chance in 1,000
that the equipment would be needed one time and
that it would save the 150 lives that would be in
jeopardy in such an event. Thus, the benefit
of this equipment in saving lives could be
portrayed by the gamble 1 chance in 1,000 to
save the 150 lives in jeopardy. Critics
argue that the money spent on this system could
be better spent enhancing other aspects of
airport safety. How strongly would you
support this proposed measure to purchase the new
equipment?
38Airport Safety Imagine you are a member of
the emergency response committee of the Eugene
Airport. There is a proposal before your
committee to purchase some expensive new
equipment for use in the event of a crash landing
of an airliner. The circumstances that might
require such equipment to be used are rare but
important. It is estimated that, over a 10
year period, there is about 1 chance in 1,000
that the equipment would be needed one time and
that it would save 98 of the 150 lives that
would be in jeopardy in such an event. Thus,
the benefit of this equipment in saving lives
could be portrayed by the gamble 1 chance in
1,000 to save 98 of the 150 lives in jeopardy.
Critics argue that the money spent on this
system could be better spent enhancing other
aspects of airport safety. How strongly would you
support this proposed measure to purchase the new
equipment?
39Proportion Dominance and Airport Safety
Saving a percentage of 150 lives receives higher
support ratings than does saving 150 lives.
40Some conclusions
- The analytic and experiential (affective) systems
of thought are exquisitely sophisticated and
embody the essence of human rationality. We need
them both (as Phineas discovered) - Both systems, however, can lead us astray.
- Each system needs the other for guidance.
41Conclusions
- We cannot assume that an intelligent person can
understand the meaning of, and properly act upon,
even the simplest of numbers such as amounts of
money or numbers of lives at risk, not to mention
less familiar measures or statistics, unless
these numbers are infused with affect.
42Conclusions
- The scientific study of affective rationality is
in its infancy. - Question Are we, by placing so much hope in
deliberative processes prior to their more
careful evaluation, taking a big risk? - GOOD DECISIONS ARE HARD TO MAKE.
- THEY REQUIRE HARD WORK AND PAIN.
43What do the public want anyway?
- The evidence, so far as technological decisions
are concerned, appears to be that the public
want - to be consulted (OED definition)
- to have an overview of the process
- not to make the decision
- to make full use of specialist knowledge
44- Decisions about sci/tech should be based
primarily on - Expert advice on risks and benefits
- Publics views of risks and benefits
- C) DK
Eurobarometer June 2005
45Q What kind of procedure might suit the public?
The indications are that its one that involves
the public at appropriate stages and also makes
full and proper use of accumulated specialist
knowledge whether its economics, science,
ethics, or law etc.
46Ortwin Renns Insight
- It is necessary to integrate
- knowledge based on technical expertise
- knowledge derived from social interests
- knowledge based on common sense and personal
experience
Ref The challenge of integrating deliberation
and expertise, Ortwin Renn, 2002.
47In conclusion
- some decisions are immensely important and may
affect countless lives - some form of deliberation is nowadays seen as
essential - to have deliberated does not entitle one
automatically to any high moral ground - all forms of deliberation are not equal
- deliberation is to some extent experimental and
its subtleties are not fully understood