from the site :
Science
 
 
Your Elusive Future Self
by_Greg  Miller_ 
(http://news.sciencemag.org/sciencenow/author/greg-miller/index.html)  on 3  
January 2013

 
Are you going to love Taylor Swift just as much in 10 years as you do now?  
Sure, you might think, I'll be basically the same person then, with roughly 
the  same preferences, values, and personality traits. But you're probably 
wrong,  according to a new study, whose authors claim that many people 
underestimate how  much they'll change in the future.  
>From picking a job to selecting a spouse, we face many decisions that will  
affect our lives far into the future. Those choices rest on some 
assumptions,  notes Daniel Gilbert, a psychologist at Harvard University. "Any 
kind of 
 lifetime commitment is based on your belief that you know the person 
you're  going to be in 10 years." 
To investigate people's predictions about their future selves, Gilbert 
teamed  up with Harvard postdoctoral fellow Jordi Quoidbach and Timothy Wilson, 
a  psychologist at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville. The trio 
devised  a series of online experiments in which a total of more than 19,000 
people  participated. In one, adults between ages 18 and 68 filled out a 
questionnaire,  scoring themselves on basic personality traits such as 
extraversion, emotional  stability, and openness to new experiences. Then the 
researchers asked them to  do it all again, this time answering either as they 
would have 10 years ago, or  as they thought they would 10 years in the future. 
The surveys from participants  of all ages indicated that on average 
_people felt  they had changed more in the past decade than they would in the 
next_ (http://www.sciencemag.org/lookup/doi/10.1126/science.1229294) , the  
researchers report online today in Science. 
Although teenagers are notoriously bad at envisioning their future selves  
("Of course I'll always want this butterfly tattoo!"), Gilbert says he was  
surprised that even older people seem to underestimate how much they'll 
change.  For example, 68-year-olds reported modest personality changes in the 
previous  decade, but 58-year-olds predicted very little, if any, change in 
the coming  decade, even though their survey answers indicated that they had 
changed  considerably since they were 48. Several follow-up experiments 
suggested that  these differences reflect errors in predicting the future 
rather 
than errors in  remembering the past. Gilbert and colleagues call this 
effect "the end of  history illusion," because it suggests that people believe, 
consciously or not,  that the present marks the point at which they've 
finally stopped changing. 
In additional surveys, the researchers found that people similarly  
underestimate changes in their personal values (things like success and  
security) 
and preferences (like their favorite band and best friend). "What  these 
data suggest, and what scads of other data from our lab and others  suggest, is 
that people really aren't very good at knowing who they're going to  be and 
hence what they're going to want a decade from now," Gilbert says. 
A final experiment hints at how this bias might affect financial decisions. 
 Gilbert and colleagues asked some participants how much they'd pay in 2012 
to  see their current favorite band play a concert in 2022. They asked 
others how  much they'd pay to see their favorite band from 2002 play a concert 
"next week"  in 2012. People were willing to pay 61% more, on average, for 
the future concert  with their current favorite band than people 10 years 
older than them were  willing to pay to see their favorite band from 2002 play 
in 2012. "You'd think  by the time people reach middle age they'd realize 
that their favorite band  today isn't necessarily going to be their favorite 
band in 10 years," Gilbert  says. Instead, he and his colleagues write, 
"participants substantially overpaid  for a future opportunity to indulge a 
current preference." 
"The really interesting thing about this paper's finding is that it reveals 
 how [a] common intuition is precisely wrong," says Nicholas Epley, a  
psychologist at the University of Chicago in Illinois. Epley says that he's  
reminded of a quotation from the 17th century French writer, François de La  
Rochefoucauld: "Everyone complains of his memory, and no one complains of his  
judgment." 
"They really demonstrate two things, that people believe they have  changed 
more than they will change, and that that belief is a mistake,"  says Leaf 
Van Boven, a social psychologist at the University of Colorado,  Boulder. 
"What's fascinating about that is that people don't have this belief  about 
other people or about the world," Van Boven adds. "We fully expect other  
people to change. We fully realize that we have changed in the past. There's  
something odd about this projection of the self into the future that's  
psychologically unique." 
But not everyone is sold on the study's conclusion that people 
underestimate  how much they will change. Another possibility is that people 
"might well 
 anticipate substantial change, yet not know how they would change, and 
thus,  just predict the status quo," says Shane Frederick, who studies 
decision-making  at Yale University. Frederick did a similar, but much smaller 
study 
as part of  his Ph.D. thesis and published it in a _book  chapter_ 
(http://faculty.som.yale.edu/shanefrederick/timeprefpersonalid.pdf)  in 2003. 
He 
also found that people predicted less change in the  future than they'd 
experienced in the past. But instead of being fooled by an  illusion, people 
might 
just have a rational reluctance to predict the  unknowable, says Frederick, 
who cites a famous quotation from the great 20th  century mathematician John 
von Neumann: "There's no sense in being precise when  you don't even know 
what you're talking about." 
We can never completely predict the future, but that doesn't mean we can't  
anticipate it and make better decisions, Gilbert says. "The single best way 
to  make predictions about what you're going to want in the future isn't to 
imagine  yourself in the future, … it's to look at other people who are in 
the very  future you're imagining," he says. For example, he and colleagues 
_previously  reported_ 
(http://www.sciencemag.org/content/323/5921/1617.abstract)  that people make 
more accurate predictions about how they'll react  
to a future event when they know how other people have reacted previously to 
it.  "Other people provide some of the best information we can get about the 
 future."

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