4.6 Article

Developmental Reversals in Risky Decision Making: Intelligence Agents Show Larger Decision Biases Than College Students

期刊

PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE
卷 25, 期 1, 页码 76-84

出版社

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0956797613497022

关键词

decision making; risk taking

资金

  1. NCI NIH HHS [R21CA149796, R21 CA149796] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NINR NIH HHS [R01NR014368-01, R01 NR014368] Funding Source: Medline
  3. NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE [R21CA149796] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER
  4. NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF NURSING RESEARCH [R01NR014368] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Intelligence agents make risky decisions routinely, with serious consequences for national security. Although common sense and most theories imply that experienced intelligence professionals should be less prone to irrational inconsistencies than college students, we show the opposite. Moreover, the growth of experience-based intuition predicts this developmental reversal. We presented intelligence agents, college students, and postcollege adults with 30 risky-choice problems in gain and loss frames and then compared the three groups' decisions. The agents not only exhibited larger framing biases than the students, but also were more confident in their decisions. The postcollege adults (who were selected to be similar to the students) occupied an interesting middle ground, being generally as biased as the students (sometimes more biased) but less biased than the agents. An experimental manipulation testing an explanation for these effects, derived from fuzzy-trace theory, made the students look as biased as the agents. These results show that, although framing biases are irrational (because equivalent outcomes are treated differently), they are the ironical output of cognitively advanced mechanisms of meaning making.

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