Title of article :
Rationality for Engineers: Part IV: Misconceptions and Debiasing
Author/Authors :
F. Yasserim, Sirous Brunel University London
Abstract :
Humans are thought of as predictably irrational, primarily due to apparent
inconsistencies in their decision-making. When presented with the same
information on different occasions, the same people often draw different
conclusions. There is a noise in the decision-making of individuals, whether
in the same or a different environment. Humans are likened to a faulty scale;
every time you weigh the same thing you get a different answer. This
variation is more pronounced when we examine decisions by different
decision-makers. Noise in decisions implies that humans’ internal gauges are
imprecise and that their dial rests on a different position when confronted with
the same choice at different times. Decision errors can relate to; correlation,
causal reasoning, probabilistic reasoning, thinking statistically, hypothetical
thought, dubious justification, not seeing everything, and even seeing
something which is not there. This part of this series of papers attempts to
clarify errors in engineers’ decision-making processes and describe how to
avoid them.
Keywords :
Heuristics , Intuition , Statistical Thinking , Rationality , Judgment , Biases , Debiasing , Reasoning
Journal title :
International Journal of Coastal and Offshore Engineering