Mistakes: Difference between revisions

From Citizendium
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Nick Gardner
imported>Nick Gardner
Line 14: Line 14:


==Misinterpretation==
==Misinterpretation==
Some errors of interpretation by decision-makers have been due to ignorance or inattention, but many have occurred subconsciously.  There have even been cases of failure to recognise  visual evidence. . Experiments have demonstrated that  the brain may make its aware of only a censored version of the information that if receives
Some errors of interpretation by decision-makers have been due to ignorance or inattention, but many have occurred subconsciously.  There have even been cases of failure to recognise  visual evidence. . Experiments have demonstrated that  the brain may make its aware of only a censored version of the information that it receives <ref>[http://www.simonslab.com/research.html Research at the University of Illinois Visual Cognition Lab]</ref>(graphicallly demonstrated in a video<ref>[http://www.theinvisiblegorilla.com/gorilla_experiment.html Christopher Chablis and Christopher Chabris and Daniel Simons ''The Invisible Gorilla'', 2010]</ref> - don't miss it !),


==Decision error==
==Decision error==

Revision as of 13:47, 13 March 2011

This article is developing and not approved.
Main Article
Discussion
Related Articles  [?]
Bibliography  [?]
External Links  [?]
Citable Version  [?]
 
This editable Main Article is under development and subject to a disclaimer.

Definition

With hindsight, any decision that has unintended consequences may be considered to have been a mistake. It is more useful, however, to define a mistake as a misguided decision, whatever its consequences. The unintended consequence that is to be expected of a misguided decision may be avoided by chance; and chance may result in an unintended consequence that could not have been anticipated. A driver may escape a collision when he crosses a busy junction against a red light. He may also be the victim of someone else who does so - but in that case, his decision to cross the junction legally cannot usefully be considered to have been a mistake, despite its unintended consequence.

Overview

Among the purposes of studies of mistakes has been the discovery of ways of avoiding them. Experimental psychology has revealed the existence of subconscious characteristics of the human brain that are conducive to misguided choices, but it has also revealed the possibility of conscious control over the subconscious. Other studies have explored the effects of organisations, organisational environments and administrative procedures. A number of measures have been adopted or proposed for the avoidance of mistakes.

The causes of mistakes have been categorised as misinformation, the misinterpretation of information, and decision errors.

Misinformation

Misinformation by journalists, politicians and businessmen is widely believed to be commonplace [1]. Misinformation in the form of "creative accounting" is a common feature of company accounts, and it has not been uncommon for the demise of a company to follow closely upon a report of its good health. Outright deception (as reported to have been practised in 2008 by the management of the Lehman Brothers bank in 2008 [2]) has seldom been established, but is widely suspected. The professions are generally believed to be trustworthy, but there have been numerous cases of inadvertent expert error. Cases involving the error known as the prosecutor's fallacy by expert witnesses and lawyers, have resulted in serious miscarriages of justice[3], and there is evidence to suggest that doctors fall victim to an error known as the false positive fallacy when evaluating blood test results[4]. Misinformation in the form of ill-founded forecasts by credit rating agencies has been revealed as one of the causes of the recession of 2008-11[5].

Misinterpretation

Some errors of interpretation by decision-makers have been due to ignorance or inattention, but many have occurred subconsciously. There have even been cases of failure to recognise visual evidence. . Experiments have demonstrated that the brain may make its aware of only a censored version of the information that it receives [6](graphicallly demonstrated in a video[7] - don't miss it !),

Decision error

Avoidance

References