2020.12.16 11:38
This is why you make bad decisions on the golf course (and how to fix it)
https://golf.com/instruction/why-you-make-bad-decisions-on-course/
2020.12.16 11:52
2020.12.17 09:35
FULL STORY
Especially during the holidays, online shopping can be overwhelming. Have you ever found yourself spending hours comparing nearly identical products, delving into details that don't actually matter to you? Have you ever finally reached a decision only to find that the product you want is out of stock? Unfortunately, if so, there is a good chance you did not end up making the best choice.
According to new research from behavioral economist Ian Chadd, an assistant professor at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, irrelevant information or unavailable options often cause people to make bad choices. When both elements are present, the probability of a poor decision is even greater.
Published in Experimental Economics, Chadd's research examined the behavioral economic concept of free disposal, where resources can be ignored without having a cost. The standard belief has been that, if irrelevant information is included when presenting a product or idea, a consumer can easily skip over the data without taking time or using cognitive power.
Through an experiment involving 222 individual tests each consisting of more than 40 questions, Chadd's research revealed that, in fact, the way information is presented does matter. Decisions made in an environment of irrelevant information carry time, cognitive, and consequence costs.
"These findings tell us a lot about choice architecture, the design process that goes into the creation of environments where people make decisions," Chadd said. "In environments where you have lots of information available, it's exceptionally important that consumers have the ability to filter out information that they find to be irrelevant."
The research also showed that consumers hold a deep "preference for simplicity" in that they are willing to pay a price to reduce the amount of irrelevant and unavailable information.
"This is important insight for policy makers and choice architects alike," Chadd said. "The goal should always be to opt towards simpler and more flexible presentation of information, so that consumers can decide for themselves what is and is not irrelevant and then not just ignore it if they see it, but also give them the option not to see it."
Story Source:
Materials provided by Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Original written by Jeanne Hedden Gallagher. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.
Journal Reference:
Cite This Page:
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. "Irrelevant information interferes with making decisions: The presence of unavailable options also leads to poor choices." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 14 December 2020. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/12/201214150332.htm>.
Excess informations, bombardments of excess informations, cause us
to make bad decisions in life as well as in the golf course, says this golfer
who is stuck up in the snowy northeastern coast.
First of all, we are having gorgeous weather with high temp 70 degrees
in Orange County, CA.
Blocking all these excess informations from entering my daily consciousness
has been my lifelong endeavor but has become much harder in my old age.
I used to advise my old patients to limit watching the news to a minimum,
which nowadays I practice myself daily.
I have a golf game with my wife this afternoon and will keep in mind what this
golfer has to say.