The Measurement of Individual Differences in Cognitive Biases: A Review and Improvement.Vincent Berthet -2021 -Frontiers in Psychology 12:630177.detailsIndividual differences have been neglected in decision-making research on heuristics and cognitive biases. Addressing that issue requires having reliable measures. The author first reviewed the research on the measurement of individual differences in cognitive biases. While reliable measures of a dozen biases are currently available, our review revealed that some measures require improvement and measures of other key biases are still lacking (e.g., confirmation bias). We then conducted empirical work showing that adjustments produced a significant improvement of some measures and (...) that confirmation bias can be reliably measured. Overall, our review and findings highlight that the measurement of individual differences in cognitive biases is still in its infancy. In particular, we suggest that contextualized (in addition to generic) measures need to be improved or developed. (shrink)
L'erreur est humaine: aux frontières de la rationalité.Vincent Berthet -2018 - Paris: CNRS éditions.detailsLes biais cognitifs amènent l'être humain à croire ce qui confirme ses croyances plutôt que ce qui les infirme. Ces comportements irrationnels influent de manière conséquente sur le maniement des probabilités, la compréhension du hasard et les prises de décision. Or, certains acteurs les exploitent pour en tirer profit, parfois aux dépens des autres. [Electre].
The Impact of Cognitive Biases on Professionals’ Decision-Making: A Review of Four Occupational Areas. [REVIEW]Vincent Berthet -2022 -Frontiers in Psychology 12.detailsThe author reviewed the research on the impact of cognitive biases on professionals’ decision-making in four occupational areas. Two main findings emerged. First, the literature reviewed shows that a dozen of cognitive biases has an impact on professionals’ decisions in these four areas, overconfidence being the most recurrent bias. Second, the level of evidence supporting the claim that cognitive biases impact professional decision-making differs across the areas covered. Research in finance relied primarily upon secondary data while research in medicine and (...) law relied mainly upon primary data from vignette studies. Two research gaps are highlighted. The first one is a potential lack of ecological validity of the findings from vignette studies, which are numerous. The second is the neglect of individual differences in cognitive biases, which might lead to the false idea that all professionals are susceptible to biases, to the same extent. To address that issue, we suggest that reliable, specific measures of cognitive biases need to be improved or developed. (shrink)