Title: Feb' 14
1Feb. 14 19, 2002
- Administrivia
- Check roll with seating chart
- Collect Mgt Skills 2
2Ch. 5 Perception and Individual Decision Making
3Key Concepts
- Perception
- Attribution
- Perceptual biases
- Decision-making models
- Ethical dilemmas
4Factors ThatInfluence Perception
5Perceiver Factors
- Attitudes (recall chapter 3)
- Interests
- Experience
- Expectations
- Physical ability (not in book take off glasses)
- Unsatisfied needs (motives, well see in ch. 6)
Ask student to give examples of things that they
think affect their perception. What do they
notice around the Unistructure?
6Target Factors
- Novelty
- Motion (walk around class room)
- Sounds (whisper)
- Size (write on board very small, very large)
- Background
- Proximity
- Similarity (guys with hats all look alike!)
7Situation Factors
- General context (e.g., work vs. social)
- Noise or other distractions
- Lighting (never forget the obvious!)
8Perception ? Attribution
- Attribution refers to our tendency to assign a
cause to behaviors - There are only two types of basic attributions
- Internal it was something about the person that
led to this behavior - External it was something about the situation
that led to this behavior
9(No Transcript)
10Attribution Biases
- Fundamental attribution error
- Self-serving bias
- Beware of cultural differences in frequency of
these biases! (Hofstede individualism v.
collectivism, particularly for fundamental
attribution error)
11Perceptual Shortcuts (Biases)
12Applications in organizations
- Selection
- Evaluation
- Assignments
- Rewards
The self-fulfilling prophecy problem
13Tuesday, Feb. 19, 2002
- Administrivia
- Exam next class, Ch. 1, 3, 4, 5
- Bring a pencil for scantron portion
14Key Concepts
- Perception
- Attribution
- Perceptual biases
- Decision-making models
- Ethical dilemmas
15Perception Decision Making
Awareness and Recognition of Problems
Interpretation and Evaluation of Information
16Decision making models
- Rational
- Bounded rationality
- Intuition
- Political
17Rational Model of Decision Making
18Assumptions of the Rational Decision Making Model
One Problem Clarity
Four Constant Preferences
Five No Constraints
Two Known Options
Three Clear Preferences
Six Maximum Payoff
19A Model of Bounded Rationality
Ascertain the Need for a Decision
Select a Few Criteria
Identify a Limited Set of Alternatives
Compare Alternatives Against Criteria
Select the First Good Enough Choice
Yes
Simplify the Problem
Expand Search for Alternatives
A Satisficing Alternative Exists
No
20Intuitive decision making
- High uncertainty levels
- Little precedent
- Hard to predictable variables
- Limited facts
- Unclear sense of direction
- Analytical data is of little use
- Several plausible alternatives
- Time constraints
21Political model of decision making
Recall Machiavellianism personality trait
22Two Important Decision-Making Phases
23Making Choices in the Workplace
Availability Heuristic
Representative Heuristic
Escalation of Commitment
24Skip if needed
Decision-Making Styles
High
Analytic
Conceptual
Tolerance for Ambiguity
Behavioral
Directive
Low
Way of Thinking
Rational
Intuitive
25Organizational Constraints
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27Ethics in Decision-Making
Utilitarian (Ego, Rule, Act)
Rights
Justice
28Ethical Dilemma, p. 150
- Pay a bribe?
- Steal from company?
- Falsify your expense account?
- Falsify your identity?
- Your friend is a thief?
29Perception Point - Counterpoint
What would you do? Ethical implications?
30Skilled Decision Making
- Analyze the context and the problem
- Match decision making style to situation
- Dont focus only on the obvious
- Be alert to potential biases