Mike - Actually, not saying anything very deep or complicated here...simply 
saying that Kahneman's Nobel is a landmark that recognizes (not necessarily 
caused) the increasing emphasis on heuristics and biases in decision-making.   
I agree with you, by the way, that much of this work has come to the public eye 
through more popular books, like Blink.

....Scott


Scott O. Lilienfeld, Ph.D.
Department of Psychology, Room 473
Emory University
36 Eagle Row,
Atlanta, Georgia 30322
[email protected]; 404-727-1125




-----Original Message-----
From: Mike Palij [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, April 15, 2011 10:58 AM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
Cc: Mike Palij
Subject: RE: [tips] Anything Interesting Happen Recently?

On Fri, 15 Apr 2011 06:31:36 -0700, Scott O Lilienfeld writes:
[snip]
>....Also, of course, Kahneman's Nobel 2002 prize and the accompanying
>increased influence of work on biases and heuristics on
>decision-making.

I'm not sure that I understand you here.  Are you saying that as a result of 
Daniel Kahneman's winning of the Nobel prize (which would have also have gone 
to Amos Tversky if he had not died of melanoma a few years earlier), the 
concept of biases and heuristics became more widespread?  A few points:

(1) Tversky & Kahneman (1974) is one of the prominent references in the 
development of the theory that people use heuristics and biases instead of 
standard logical reasoning or random guessing (indeed, people are systematic 
but the rules and reasoning they use are wrong, so, they are systematic but 
wrong -- but generally close enough to the
right answer for government work).   See:
http://www.sciencemag.org/content/185/4157/1124.short

(2) Although T&K were mathematical psychologists (with a cognitive
bent) social psychologists picked up on their theories quickly.  This is shown 
in the 1986 Psych Review article by Robert Wyer and Thomas Srull; see:
http://psycnet.apa.org/journals/rev/93/3/322/
Indeed, a cottage industry in social psychology/cognition developed to study 
how people navigated everyday social interactions through the used of 
heuristics and biases.

(3)  I'm not 100% sure of the following but I believe Lyn Abramson was one of 
the first clinical psychologists to promote the use of heuristics in explaining 
depression in her hopelessness theory of depression. An interesting book that 
ties these threads together is her 1988 edited volume "Social Cognition and 
Clinical Psychology"; see:
http://books.google.com/books?id=R0NkQgAACAAJ&dq=lyn+abramson+clinical+social+psychology&hl=en&ei=DVSoTYX3I8Tz0gGOwpz5CA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3&ved=0CDwQ6AEwAg
or
http://tinyurl.com/abramson1988

(4)  It is possible that the concept of heuristics and biases became better 
known to the general public around 2002 not because of Kahneman's winning of 
the Nobel prize but because Malcolm Gladwell started to write about automatic 
processing with heuristics in his New Yorker essays and the book "Blink" in 
which he writes about Gerd Gigerenzer's "fast and frugal heuristics" 
(ironically, Gigerenzer's position is that heuristics are not incorrect ways of 
reasoning, rather they are cost-effective methods of making decisions under 
conditions of incomplete information and uncertainty; Gigerenzer was critical 
of T&K on other points as well).

(5)  My contribution to what is interesting is the increased use of multilevel 
analysis and bayesian analysis both theory and statistical analysis.

-Mike Palij
New York University
[email protected]



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