Title: Decision Making
1Decision Making
2Definition of Decision Making
- Characteristics of decision making
- Selecting a choice from a number of options
- Some information available with respect to
choices - Time frame is relatively long gt 1 sec
- Choice is associated with uncertinty
3Classical Decision Theory
- Normative Decision Models expected value of the
outcome (win 50 with P .5). Optimizing choice
from all possible. - Descriptive Decision Models most decision
makers violate the assumptions of normative
decision making (optimum solution). Base
decisions on simpler method of looking at a few
options and selecting one that is acceptable
(satisficing). Shifting to simplifying
heuristics.
4Example Normative Decision
- Alternative State of Nature/Probability
N1Dry Hole N2Sm Well N3Big Well
Expected - p1.6 p2.3 p3.1 Value
- A1Don't Drill 0 0
0 0 - A2Drill Alone -500,000 300,000 9,300,000
720,000 - A3Farm Out 0 125,000
1,250,000 162,500
5Heuristics and Biases
6Factors Cognitive Limitations That Effect
Decision Making
- Amount or quality of cue information brought into
working memory (WM) - Available decision making time
- Attention Resources
- Amount quality of persons LTM knowledge
- Ability to retrieve relevant LTM information
- WM capacity limitations
7Heuristics
- Definition problem-solving by trial and error
a method of solving a problem for which no
formula exists, based on informal methods or
experience, and employing a form of trial and
error iteration
8Heuristics Biases in Obtaining Using Cues
- Attention to a limited number of cues
- Cue primacy preliminary cues tend to carry more
weight than follow-on cues is the primacy effect. - Inattention to later cues.
- Cue salience (noticeable) bias.
- Overweighting of unreliable cues or treating all
cues as equal.
9Heuristic Biases in Hypothesis Generation
- A limited number of hypotheses are generated.
- Available heuristic tendency to rely on recent
or frequent heuristic. - Representativeness heuristic judging an event
as likely if it represents the typical features
of a category - Overconfidence believing you are correct more
often than you really are
10Heuristic Biases in Hypothesis Evaluation
Selection
- Cognitive fixation once a hypothesis is
generated there is a tendency to ignore
subsequent cues. - Confirmation bias seeking out confirming
information and not disconfirming information.
11Heuristic Biases in Action Selection
- Retrieval of a small number of actions from LTM.
- Availability heuristic for actions tendency to
retrieve most available actions which is function
of frequency and recency. - Availability of possible outcomes tendency to
base decisions on what you think are the best
outcome consequences, not what they really are.
12Naturalistic Decision Making
- Definition The way people use their experience
to make complex decisions in a field setting.
Problems tend to be - Ill-structured
- Uncertain, dynamic environments
- Information rich environment where cues change
rapidly - Cognitive processing with iterative/feedback
loops - Multiple shifting and competing goals
- Time constraints or time stress
- High risk
- Multiple persons involved in the decision
13Skill, Rule, Knowledge Based Task Performance
14More Views of Naturalistic Decision Making
- Cognitive Continuum Theory decision process
occurs along a continuum from intuition to
analysis - Situation Awareness perception of elements in
environment within a volume of time space,
comprehension of their meaning, projection of
their near future status - Recognition-Primed Decision Making experts
recognize a pattern recall a single course of
action - Schemas, Stories, Mental Models analytical
processing begins with situation assessment which
yields 2nd level situation awareness where a
mental representation is constructed.
Representation is called a story or mental model.
15An Integrated Model of Real-World Decision Making
16Improving Human Decision Making
- Redesign situation assessment environment for
performance support - Training Help people overcome heuristic biases
- Decision Aids
- Expert Systems Using computers to capture the
knowledge of experts to provide answers to the
decision maker - Cognitive Support Using computers as decision
support systems. Any interactive support system
that helps the decision maker
17Problem Solving
- Problem solving occurs when there is insufficient
knowledge to readily make a decision and creative
processes are required. - Characteristics
- Person doesnt have WM capacity
- Person doesnt have enough system knowledge
- Person has system knowledge, but it is
disconnected unorganized - Errors biases in problem solving (similar to
biases in decision making) - Poor problem definition
- Failure to generate the correct solution plan
- Limitations of WM