I'm a little doubtful about this particular study, since it's measuring satisfaction with the choice, rather than choice quality, and learning about alternatives retrospectively can lower satisfaction but not choice quality. That said, there's definitely a lot to be said for using instincts in many cases; switching from instinct which includes more data to explicit reasoning which uses less information is a common failure mode.
Of course, we can't just trust our instincts directly; they're full of ape-stuff. We have to understand them well enough to know when to trust and when to override, to adjust a few knobs, and to work around the major flaws. In particular, our instincts for danger are much too strong for our present environment, and they also have a lot of stuff in them that responds to status. personally, I had to strongly weaken my resistance to perceived status moves, because it left me unable to take advice or update in many circumstances.
What if we make better decisions when we trust our gut instincts?
I usually do.
Instincts can be treated the same way other (external) experts are. They are valuable sources of evidence. How much you trust your instincts on a given decision depends on the degree to which you believe your instinct is an expert decision maker in that kind of situation.
I used to play paintball competitively, and when I first got into the competitive scene I started making aggressive moves no matter what my instincts said because my instincts were wrong. I did this to train my instincts, and it worked. I quickly figured out when I could make moves and when I couldn't. This process allowed me to adjust my instincts as I started competing against better opponents - where making moves is much more difficult.
A perfect parable for learning social skills. The consequences for social failures nowadays, like those for getting shot with a paint ball, are not the death that our instincts expect.
Yep. There are negative consequences in both cases - rejection and social awkwardness in one, stinging welts and possibly losing a game in the other- but the long term consequences are worth it.
As a result, we’re able to make sense of the plethora of options in the toothpaste aisle, assigning each alternative an affective tag: the best option is quickly associated with the most positive emotion.
Does the author remember advertising? I forget the name, but there's an economics effect that if you use a correlated but sufficiently game-able proxy for quality, the market will "game" it and make it uncorrelated.
Anyhow, I think it's an interesting topic, but I'd much rather read the second paper (dang paywalls) than some science writer who doesn't want to remember that advertising exists.
if you use a correlated but sufficiently game-able proxy for quality, the market will "game" it and make it uncorrelated.
A good alternative title would be "What if the Valley of Bad Rationality isn't a valley?". This is something that I worry about...often.
That doesn't make any sense given the usage of "rationality". However, the functionally identical possibility of the other side being out of reasonable human reach is functionally identical and possible.
What I do... Err, what my internal stated policy is is to use rationality mainly on meta level in deciding which intuitions, authorities, algorithms, or other sources to trust how much, as well as for tuning the knobs on intuitions, either directly or by framing, and setting up environments that will make sure the right decision procedure is used. For actual decisions either intuition or numbers are supposed to be used.
In practice poor mental health, akrasia, and the general unreliability of the human brain makes such a fragile setup break frequently, but i haven't been able to come up with anything better. Oh, and because I kind of suck at doing anything like that in the first place. So, yea... But it might work out better for someone with a less sucky brain.
It surely depends upon how knowledgable you are about the subject, maybe your gut feeling can know better than you what's the better choice, but if you're not informed enough, then it's not reliable.
Link: wired.com/wiredscience/2011/09/how-should-we-make-hard-decisions/