This book addresses an intriguing question: are our decisions rational? It explains seemingly irrational human decision-making behavior by taking into account our limited ability to process information. It also shows with several examples that optimization under granularity restriction leads to observed human decision-making. Drawing on the Nobel-prize-winning studies by Kahneman and Tversky, researchers have found many examples of seemingly irrational decisions: e.g., we overestimate the probability of rare events.

Our explanation is that since human abilities to process information are limited, we operate not with the exact values of relevant quantities, but with “granules” that contain these values. We show that optimization under such granularity indeed leads to observed human behavior. In particular, for the first time, we explain the mysterious empirical dependence of betting odds on actual probabilities.

This book can be recommended to all students interested in human decision-making, to researchers whose work involves human decisions, and to practitioners who design and employ systems involving human decision-making —so that they can better utilize our ability to make decisions under uncertainty.

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Human Decisions Are Often Suboptimal: Phenomenon of Bounded Rationality.- Towards Explaining Other Aspects of Human Decision Making.- Towards Explaining Heuristic Techniques (Such as Fuzzy) in Expert Decision Making.- Decision Making Under Uncertainty and Restrictions on Computation Resources: From Heuristic to Optimal Techniques.- Conclusions and Future Work.
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This book addresses an intriguing question: are our decisions rational? It explains seemingly irrational human decision-making behavior by taking into account our limited ability to process information. It also shows with several examples that optimization under granularity restriction leads to observed human decision-making. Drawing on the Nobel-prize-winning studies by Kahneman and Tversky, researchers have found many examples of seemingly irrational decisions: e.g., we overestimate the probability of rare events.

Our explanation is that since human abilities to process information are limited, we operate not with the exact values of relevant quantities, but with “granules” that contain these values. We show that optimization under such granularity indeed leads to observed human behavior. In particular, for the first time, we explain the mysterious empirical dependence of betting odds on actual probabilities.

This book can be recommended to all students interestedin human decision-making, to researchers whose work involves human decisions, and to practitioners who design and employ systems involving human decision-making —so that they can better utilize our ability to make decisions under uncertainty.

Read more
Explains seemingly irrational human decision-making by taking into account our limited ability to process information Shows with several examples that optimization under granularity restriction leads to observed human decision-making Demonstrates that granularity helps to explain seemingly irrational human decision-making Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras
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Product details

ISBN
9783319622132
Published
2017-07-12
Publisher
Springer International Publishing AG; Springer International Publishing AG
Height
235 mm
Width
155 mm
Age
Research, UP, 05
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet