This intuitively makes sense to me. And for exactly the same reason that
some old reporters spellcheck a piece by reading it backwards - it forces
you to disengage your pattern recognition habits and pay attention, an
inherently left-brain activity.

Udhay

http://www.wired.com/2012/04/language-and-bias/


TO JUDGE A risk more clearly, it may help to consider it in a foreign
language.

A series of experiments on more than 300 people from the U.S. and Korea
found that thinking in a second language reduced deep-seated, misleading
biases that unduly influence how risks and benefits are perceived.

“Would you make the same decisions in a foreign language as you would in
your native tongue?” asked psychologists led by Boaz Keysar of the
University of Chicago in an April 18 Psychological Science study.

“It may be intuitive that people would make the same choices regardless of
the language they are using, or that the difficulty of using a foreign
language would make decisions less systematic. We discovered, however, that
the opposite is true: Using a foreign language reduces decision-making
biases,” wrote Keysar’s team.

Psychologists say human reasoning is shaped by two distinct modes of
thought: one that’s systematic, analytical and cognition-intensive, and
another that’s fast, unconscious and emotionally charged.

'Would you make the same decisions in a foreign language?'In light of this,
it’s plausible that the cognitive demands of thinking in a non-native,
non-automatic language would leave people with little leftover mental
horsepower, ultimately increasing their reliance on quick-and-dirty
cogitation.
Equally plausible, however, is that communicating in a learned language
forces people to be deliberate, reducing the role of potentially unreliable
instinct. Research also shows that immediate emotional reactions to
emotively charged words are muted in non-native languages, further hinting
at deliberation.

To investigate these possibilities, Keysar’s team developed several tests
based on scenarios originally proposed by psychologist Daniel Kahneman, who
in 2002 won a Nobel Prize in economics for his work on prospect theory,
which describes how people intuitively perceive risk.

In one famous example, Kahneman showed that, given the hypothetical option
of saving 200 out of 600 lives, or taking a chance that would either save
all 600 lives or none at all, people prefer to save the 200 — yet when the
problem is framed in terms of losing lives, many more people prefer the
all-or-nothing chance rather than accept a guaranteed loss of 400 lives.

People are, in a nutshell, instinctively risk-averse when considering gain
and risk-taking when faced with loss, even when the essential decision is
the same. It’s a gut-level human predisposition, and if second-language
thinking made people think less systematically, Keysar’s team supposed the
tendency would be magnified. Conversely, if second-language thinking
promoted deliberation, the tendency would be diminished.

The first experiment involved 121 American students who learned Japanese as
a second language. Some were presented in English with a hypothetical
choice: To fight a disease that would kill 600,000 people, doctors could
either develop a medicine that saved 200,000 lives, or a medicine with a
33.3 percent chance of saving 600,000 lives and a 66.6 percent chance of
saving no lives at all.

Results of two tests of foreign-language effects on framing biases. In
each, people were given the choice between sure savings or an
all-or-nothing bet. Bars show how many people preferred sure savings when
the choice was framed in terms of gains (black) or losses (gray) and
considered in their native language (left pair) or second language (right
pair).

Nearly 80 percent of the students chose the safe option. When the problem
was framed in terms of losing rather than saving lives, the safe-option
number dropped to 47 percent. When considering the same situation in
Japanese, however, the safe-option number hovered around 40 percent,
regardless of how choices were framed. The role of instinct appeared
reduced.

Two subsequent experiments in which the hypothetical situation involved job
loss rather than death, administered to 144 native Korean speakers from
Korea’s Chung Nam National University and 103 English speakers studying
abroad in Paris, found the same pattern of enhanced deliberation. “Using a
foreign language diminishes the framing effect,” wrote Keysar’s team.

The researchers next tested how language affected decisions on matters of
direct personal import. According to prospect theory, the possibility of
small losses outweigh the promise of larger gains, a phenomenon called
myopic risk aversion and rooted in emotional reactions to the idea of loss.

The same group of Korean students was presented with a series of
hypothetical low-loss, high-gain bets. When offered bets in Korean, just 57
percent took them. When offered in English, that number rose to 67 percent,
again suggesting heightened deliberation in a second language.

To see if the effect held up in real-world betting, Keysar’s team recruited
54 University of Chicago students who spoke Spanish as a second language.
Each received $15 in $1 bills, each of which could be kept or bet on a coin
toss. If they lost a toss, they’d lose the dollar, but winning returned the
dollar and another $1.50 — a proposition that, over multiple bets, would
likely be profitable.

When the proceedings were conducted in English, just 54 percent of students
took the bets, a number that rose to 71 percent when betting in Spanish.
“They take more bets in a foreign language because they expect to gain in
the long run, and are less affected by the typically exaggerated aversion
to losses,” wrote Keysar and colleagues.

The researchers believe a second language provides a useful cognitive
distance from automatic processes, promoting analytical thought and
reducing unthinking, emotional reaction.

“Given that more and more people use a foreign language on a daily basis,
our discovery could have far-reaching implications,” they wrote, suggesting
that people who speak a second language might use it when considering
financial decisions. “Over a long time horizon, this might very well be
beneficial.”


Citation: “The Foreign-Language Effect: Thinking in a Foreign Tongue
Reduces Decision Biases.” By Boaz Keysar, Sayuri L. Hayakawa and Sun Gyu
An. Psychological Science, published online 18 April 2012.

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((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

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