Cognitive Biases 101, with Peter Baumann | Big Think

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Күн бұрын

Cognitive Biases 101, with Peter Baumann
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How much does cognitive bias change people's perception? Well, the history of computing would be a lot different. And so would many major orchestras, who had to implement a curtain during auditions so that judges and orchestral directors could only judge musicians on their skills... and not their gender. Michael Li, PhD, is the founder of The Data Incubator, an education startup training STEM PhDs to be data scientists and quants.
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MICHAEL LI:
Michael Li, PhD, is the founder of The Data Incubator, an education startup training STEM PhDs to be data scientists and quants. He has worked at Foursquare, Google, A16Z, NASA, JPMorgan, and D.E. Shaw. He is a Hertz, NSF, and Marshall Scholar and is an alumnus of Princeton and Cambridge. Michael founded a student-run conference in quant trading that features leading industry figures and raises money for educational non-profits like America Needs You.
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TRANSCRIPT:
Michael Li: A sort of interesting fact is that, while today programming is viewed as an extremely male-dominated field, it was totally the opposite at the dawn of computing.
So if you look at who the original programmers were, they were actually women! All programmers from the very beginning were women and it was because this job was seen as being “beneath” men. And so somehow in the interceding 30, 40, 50 years, that gender of dynamics has completely shifted around.
But what we’re seeing now is that sometimes it’s the implicit biases that we have which are holding back women and minorities from entering the workforce, either as data scientists or as computer engineers and software engineers.
And we’ve seen a lot of research in this area that’s shown that there can be some implicit biases in how we judge people once we know their name, their gender or their race.
And what we do when we assess the people who are going to be working for us is we are completely blind to these things.
We actually strip away the name when we consider people’s applications. We just look at how they perform on a series of challenges that we give them that really try to test their ability to be data scientists and test their understanding of these kind of core fundamental mathematical programming concepts.
And when we do that I think it actually becomes a much more fair process and it actually can help increase the number of women and underrepresented minorities who sort of make it through the screening process.
Just to give you one sort of quick anecdote about this there’s a famous story about music auditions in the 1970s where orchestras had a very, very tiny percentage of their members or their players there - the people who were playing in the orchestra as women.
And what happened is at some point they decided to try to break free from this and they would put down a curtain between the performer, that is the auditioner, and the judging panel that was trying to determine whether she or he should be allowed to play in the orchestra. And when they did the results were night and day.
There’s a famous study that’s up on the National Bureau of Economic Research’s website published by two famous researchers from Harvard talking about this.
It’s called “orchestrating diversity” and it talks about how the results were a night and day difference: the fraction for women who made it past the screening round shot up something like sevenfold between not having the curtain down and having the curtain down.
And it just goes to sort of show that at this time there was an implicit bias that women weren’t really the kind of caliber of musician that you needed to be able to perform at Carnegie Hall, right? At these kind of top level symphonic performance.
And when you put down a curtain and you just listened to them as opposed to being able to see whether they were a man or a woman, you then-without that kind of knowledge you suddenly were forced to make judgments just based on the music, just based on their ability and you saw that you were much more willing to let in women than before.

Пікірлер: 89
@utkua
@utkua 10 жыл бұрын
Biases keeps us away from anxiety but also slows down character development even intelligence in some degree. Like most of things in life, there is a trade off.
@bobbyhalick
@bobbyhalick 10 жыл бұрын
Tobias is my favorite bias.
@TheLKStar
@TheLKStar 10 жыл бұрын
I have a bias that makes me think I can change other people biases, if I objectively know they are just ignoring/creating facts.
@OmniphonProductions
@OmniphonProductions 10 жыл бұрын
Sadly they have a bias that tells them if they keep repeating (or have heard) the same nonsense enough, facts will become irrelevant. It's hard to change a mind that was closed before you even got there. Yeah?
@neilc.reinhardt8769
@neilc.reinhardt8769 10 жыл бұрын
“I know that most men, including those at ease with problems of the greatest complexity, can seldom accept even the simplest and most obvious truth if it be such as would oblige them to admit the falsity of conclusions which they have delighted in explaining to colleagues, which they have proudly taught to others, and which they have woven, thread by thread, into the fabric of their lives.” Leo Tolstoy
@IvanusPrime
@IvanusPrime 10 жыл бұрын
One of the fewer videos recently on BigThink that actually made sense, was useful, provided new information and was easy to listen to.
@bwyan22
@bwyan22 10 жыл бұрын
Agreed, the others are kinda of dry, or too short to provide a full scope of understanding and appreciation, or are just to promote someones book lol. This was just insightful and well put.
@IvanusPrime
@IvanusPrime 10 жыл бұрын
Are you related to THE Alan Watts? :D
@5micky2
@5micky2 10 жыл бұрын
Probably because Peter Baumann is a musician and a businessman, not an academic. That means he is more connected with the real world and aware of real stuff. And he respects precision and accuracy, due to his German background and education. Also he understands the importance of communicating things clearly so that anyone can understand.
@rtjtjcdihgysupdrzvorief
@rtjtjcdihgysupdrzvorief 10 жыл бұрын
Being aware of your bias makes life unbearable. You know that your intuition is wrong, that your personality is worthless since it separates you from the truth. Thinking doesn't make happy at all, but I can't stop. So now I can see the truth, that every relevance I will ever perceive is given by myself. Might as well stop giving anything relevance. Lost in constant abstraction I'm divided from the ability of true (and blind) happiness, forced by my conscience to look for the truth all the time.
@LtDeadeye
@LtDeadeye 10 жыл бұрын
Such is the life of a philosopher. Perhaps ignorance trully is bliss. Personally, I think that if you grant the existence of God, all the confusion brought about by the hopeless abyss of naturalism falls neatly into place. Your intuition COULD BE wrong but it isn't NECESSARILY wrong. Perhaps the problem could be that you lack a mechanism of verification. Break the cycle of circular reasoning! For example: If every relevance you will ever perceive is given by yourself and you also think that your intuitions are wrong, then every relevance is not given by yourself...because your intuition is wrong! Including the relevence of this discussion. Under God, persons have intrinsic value, so their relevance is independent of your intuition or opinion. Things, however, have extrinsic value. The relevance of things is absolutely dependent upon your value of them. Love people, use things. At the risk of sounding overly preachy, God is the plumbline! God is the compass! You're 100 ft below the surface of the sea and you don't know which way is up. God is that bubble floating upwards. Follow him to clarity and rest.
@rtjtjcdihgysupdrzvorief
@rtjtjcdihgysupdrzvorief 10 жыл бұрын
LtDeadeye Thanks for the answer. I forgot how to believe, I'm really kinda lost. When all depends on your life and it isn't good to you, then you need something to believe in.
@TheGerogero
@TheGerogero 10 жыл бұрын
Sometimes I think I'd be better off if I had never heard of logical fallacies, cognitive biases, Socratic ignorance, etc.. I'd be quite dumb, yes, but very confident.
@HaseoOkami
@HaseoOkami 10 жыл бұрын
Confident or stupid? Those are two different things. And remember what stupid people end up doing most of the time... hurting themselves or others.
@washingtonboy1986
@washingtonboy1986 2 жыл бұрын
Ignorence is bliss
@shannonmcstormy5021
@shannonmcstormy5021 2 жыл бұрын
My question is why aren't we teaching about Cognitive Biases in school, and more specifically, how to manage/compensate for them, ideally, stop doing them......
@TheGerogero
@TheGerogero 2 жыл бұрын
@@shannonmcstormy5021 Well then we'd be resistant to marketing and cheap politics, which are the pillars of our social order.
@MiaGadegaard
@MiaGadegaard 10 жыл бұрын
I've been arguing with people a lot in general, and in my angry teen years I was convinced I was right and everyone else was stupid.. but nowadays I've kinda come to realize that doesn't really work out in discussions, because I am biased myself undoubtedly, but I'm trying to take that into consideration too, but the other person(s) I'm arguing with are very biased too in favor of their own opinions. So I've found that trying to stick with factual arguments that everyone theoretically can agree with/(more importantly) can't disagree with, is a good way to go as it ideally goes beyond these cognitive biases that everyone has, including myself.
@TheWrencher
@TheWrencher 10 жыл бұрын
I understand what you're saying, however I think it better to create arguments that are objective in which people can disagree with you. Otherwise you're building rhetorical statements in which you're probably being bias lol
@Neueregel
@Neueregel 10 жыл бұрын
cool story
@MiaGadegaard
@MiaGadegaard 10 жыл бұрын
Neueregel my thanks, your turn to tell one now
@OmniphonProductions
@OmniphonProductions 10 жыл бұрын
I love your approach. However, in certain debates "confirmation bias" (usually as a result of indoctrination by and within one's social circle) cannot be surmounted. For instance, millions of people will insist that their religious explanations of this or that are absolutely correct DESPITE any fact-based, evidence-filled statement to the contrary. Similarly in politics, Liberals and Conservatives (especially today) are so bolstered by their respective parties that they are unable to even fathom that the opposition may be right about something. I'll never stop trying to bring FACTS to the debate, but some debates are starting to feel hopeless. One can only hope that they are viewed by some objective third party, who learns the difference between facts and ideology. Yes?
@Neueregel
@Neueregel 10 жыл бұрын
gespilk cool story
@bullbanks
@bullbanks 10 жыл бұрын
Great video!
@lisaengelbrektson
@lisaengelbrektson 10 жыл бұрын
This was a great video
@x1plus1x
@x1plus1x 10 жыл бұрын
You are special and unique Peter!
@badoocee1967
@badoocee1967 10 жыл бұрын
Most would seem to think that Biases are completely definitive of character...I used to think so.
@UltimateP0wnage
@UltimateP0wnage 10 жыл бұрын
Seems like the unique bias is just the confirmation bias applied to a person.
@TheBadAssNcrRanger
@TheBadAssNcrRanger 10 жыл бұрын
I 100% agree with this.
@deadasfak
@deadasfak 10 жыл бұрын
We are unique. Like everyone else.
@troylenny5848
@troylenny5848 4 жыл бұрын
Genes and experience, different electron effects - like Harry Potter
@Totumfacky
@Totumfacky 3 жыл бұрын
I wonder what confirmation bias is in Poland. When I heard that in Germany that bias is "don't make a mistake, get everything right" it makes me a connotation that Germany is so neat country with a lot the things fixed that in Poland the same things are broken. Sometimes I think Polish confirmation bias is "don't do this - what others will tell, what your neighbour will tell, what your grandmother will tell?" - could be confirmation bias damaging? Like abstaining from acting and turning negative against other?
@UponGiantsShoulders
@UponGiantsShoulders 10 жыл бұрын
On Uniqueness "bias". Complexity and uniqueness tend go hand in hand. Naturally certain questions arise when discussing the definitive features of a person. What defines a person? How specific do we get; what is the resolution of inquiry? If you imagine experience is fundamental, and that all aspects of a person are derived from experience then it becomes even harder to imagine sameness. I will say it again. If each experience shapes a person, even in some small way, then it becomes harder and harder to imagine sameness across a large group of free people. It seems to me you have to either disagree with the notion that experience shapes what it means to be us, or disregard the details of experiences which would clearly be unique in order to arrive at the conclusion that each of us are not in fact unique. 7 billion people is a lot of people, however the odds of getting the same combination of pieces when each set contains a large number of variables is mind mindbogglingly small. Another way of saying this is that it does not take many variables to make a large set of unique combinations. It seems to me this particular "bias" is more about resolution of inquiry, or philosophy and what you think defines a person, than it is about psychology. On one end you have individuals dismissing the features of personality the opposition points at, essentially claiming they are trivial. Then the rebuttal points out the arbitrary nature of the level of inquiry chosen. Philosophically speaking it should be clear how impossible the task of deciding what goes into defining even a simple thing, no less a complex thing. Now, most people think they are special, this IMHO is not the same at all. You could be unique, and not special at all. Again I strongly feel this is more a matter or scale, or resolution, than of uniqueness. 1+1=2, and that is always true. In a set of 3 [1,2,3], each are unique, but not necessarily special. Uniqueness is a objective mathematical concept, being special is a subjective and in line with psychological aspects of bias. It may be unwieldy to call it special bias, or specialness bias or feeling special bias, but the term unique just makes a mess of the meanings involved and the focus of the topic. .02
@ricksantkuyl3054
@ricksantkuyl3054 Жыл бұрын
He says that bias is ok - I disagree. Bias results in incorrect interpretations of what's going on. It results in delusions (a disconnect with reality). And you can't win a battle with mother nature, you can only work with her and our problem solving ability is limited by how well we understand how the world works. I'd suggest that bias (delusions) are a key cause of the political polarization we have.
@alexplotkin3368
@alexplotkin3368 4 жыл бұрын
Great point that the world looks different for other people.
@TopShelfization
@TopShelfization 10 жыл бұрын
It doesn't matter that i'm _biased_ because i'm *always right*.
@troylenny5848
@troylenny5848 4 жыл бұрын
So true. Truth is over-rated except when needed for Science matters. Bias, or choosing a believed effect e.g. smoking gives you obesity makes new discoveries, for your happiness. Of course, once you do science to test rather than just be defensive you need to check the enemy of this.
@lakshmisharma6182
@lakshmisharma6182 9 ай бұрын
I think biases are very important otherwise how will we live and particular biases can help us do so many things.
@erlineandrews
@erlineandrews 4 жыл бұрын
I think everyone I meet is unique actually. Maybe I misunderstood his point.
@shinn-tyanwu4155
@shinn-tyanwu4155 6 ай бұрын
You are genius 😊
@doublextreme360
@doublextreme360 10 жыл бұрын
You are unique...just like everybody else...
@DanOC1991
@DanOC1991 10 жыл бұрын
Seems as if he's confused bias with preference a lot in this video. Bias specifically implies an unconscious choice.
@toosinbeymen6304
@toosinbeymen6304 10 жыл бұрын
There's a lot to chew on in your video. A really interesting talk.
@gabrielbraga6749
@gabrielbraga6749 10 жыл бұрын
Ants and social animals in general are also "with themselves 24/7" and they seem to behave just as if they're the opposite of unique (thinking about their bias too is just as fascinating, by the way). So, although I agree with the exposed, I think a point has been missed by using that as an argument. Nice video. Loved the reflection!
@hbunnyo
@hbunnyo 10 жыл бұрын
Yeah just like it's what we do with that information that is just as important as having it right? That's what you mean?
@Caarnji
@Caarnji 10 жыл бұрын
Yeah and ants definitely reflect on their personality or have the ability to think...oh wait they don´t, why they can function solely for the good of the whole never them-self. Your example was probably the most absurd you could come up with in regards of bias. ...choose something with a more complex brain, like say a wolf, that also has an personality which CAN have a bias in the 1. place and they will chose them-self in regards of self preservation instead the pack if it comes down to it.
@waltherjohnson
@waltherjohnson 10 жыл бұрын
what if i consider everyone, and every single person unique? i think i could probably try to do that without hurting my view of the world. Would that still count as uniqueness bias? I really don't like the idea of fooling myself, so yeah, i'd like to see a little bit more of reality.
@noticias6111
@noticias6111 10 жыл бұрын
Somehow I have a feeling that a lot of the things that might come easy to a person (a skill,an ability,a talent,a fondness for something etc),if they follow/make sedgeways to different abilities or topics *only* b/c it's related to the thing they found easy,they've essentially built a centering point that starts with what came the easiest/most organic to them and learned to accomadate the other things in their life around that. I think that may count as an example of how confirmation bias can be used to make a pattern of the world (or *a world"=reality being the sum of our social interactions in this case) where things confirm to what we know of."Perception is the most important" factor,homies. As for saying that "There's not any particular bias that I would recognize that's more important than the other",I kindly quasi-disagree;the self-preservation bias --(it) has a nifty spot at the bottom of the old Maslow's hiearchy of needs for a reason,eh?.Yet even that can hit the road sometimes:refer to "I robot" or when we put our lives at risk for loved ones.The self-preservation bias isn't really hampered with unless their's a weighty justification that presents itself to it,ussually something extreme,specific and stuff that ppl regularly avert. The uniqueness bias:does it grow or shrink with the amounts of introspection you do yourself ;) or the amount of analysis you do to other ppl ?.
@tonyodoherty8983
@tonyodoherty8983 Жыл бұрын
My bias is to cringe when I hear "reality" used to mean a fixed entity that is the same for everyone. I prefer "actuality". Reality is in one's mind; actuality is all around us. There are as many realities as there are living individuals.
@LHager
@LHager 23 күн бұрын
3:18 You’d better believe it.
@LH-jl9jt
@LH-jl9jt 15 күн бұрын
3:18 So nice when said twice, but how about thrice?
@LHager
@LHager 9 күн бұрын
3:18 One more time.
@LH-jl9jt
@LH-jl9jt 7 күн бұрын
3:18 And again.
@LHager
@LHager Күн бұрын
3:18 …Again.
@TipoQueTocaelPiano
@TipoQueTocaelPiano 9 жыл бұрын
You really are unic ;)
@vf3d
@vf3d 9 жыл бұрын
Shit, I thought I was unique.
@williammcewan6698
@williammcewan6698 Жыл бұрын
Excellent 👍 👍 👍 👍
@grimpiece
@grimpiece 10 жыл бұрын
What if we assume that our morality is just a group of biases?
@1p6t1gms
@1p6t1gms 10 жыл бұрын
Tangerine Dream
@bambapabbi
@bambapabbi 10 жыл бұрын
Interesting thoughts from Bruce Willis
@smokyjoe321
@smokyjoe321 7 жыл бұрын
Surely it's a clone of Bruce Willis and Hans Gruber
@jeremywvarietyofviewpoints3104
@jeremywvarietyofviewpoints3104 2 жыл бұрын
Are there non-cognitive biases?
@lakshmisharma6182
@lakshmisharma6182 9 ай бұрын
To be very honest if bias is this what objectivity is so e.g we choose this country we are bias our constitution is bias our pasr experience are bias what is actually unbias- actually our objective is also bias it's relative.
@Duracell2
@Duracell2 6 жыл бұрын
"The world looks different to other people..." If half of America started with this, who knows where we'd be...
@dylankeith2833
@dylankeith2833 10 жыл бұрын
"When we're in some kind of discussion or we go into a different culture, [it is important] that we recognize that the world looks different for other people..." Recognizing cognitive bias may be an important issue. However, even the idea of bringing up the topic of confirmation bias is in itself confirmation bias; the idea that in our Western cultures we value the discussion of biases as opposed to not, because of the societies in which we are raised. From a linguistic anthropological perspective, it is even ingrained into the kinds of phrases we use, such as "Do as the Romans do." We value cultural differences and when we are faced with different ideas upon entering a new culture, we believe the best discourse is to try our best and assimilate into that culture, whether it be to learn a bit of the language, try some of the foods, or try and understand the local beliefs. However, this concept is not universally held. For the thousands of Muslims entering Western Europe, or Latin Americans coming into the United States, just as an example, are they really sitting down and pondering, "Hey, we all have cognitive biases, and maybe the best way of dealing with intercultural relations is to recognize those biases and put in an effort in regards to local assimilation?" We ourselves recognize that the world is different and we should try to follow in the footsteps of those from the culture in which we enter. It is generally looked down upon to not learn at least some of the language and gestures of the host country, not dress in an appropriate fashion, and not try to regard the beliefs of those as different but equal to our own. We our quick to condemn those who do not adopt the local customs as "arrogant" or "ignorant Westerners." We do this to ourselves, but why do we not hold the same standard for those entering our own cultures? Why do we not ask those entering our cultures to check THEIR biases at the front door in regard to understanding our cultures? At worst, we are labeled as "intolerant" for believing that someone entering our culture should try and adopt some of our ways while they are there, yet when we go abroad we call ourselves "intolerant" for NOT adopting the local customs.
@erlineandrews
@erlineandrews 7 жыл бұрын
I don't agree with his examples of bias. Biases are irrational. That's what makes them bad! Preferring to be on stable ground rather than wobbling ground is not a bias. On wobbling ground you're more likely to fall down and hurt yourself. Preferring to be alive rather than dead is not a bias!
@Tassdo
@Tassdo 10 жыл бұрын
T'as oublié de me remercier Baumann.
@MrHeems
@MrHeems 7 жыл бұрын
I have a bias for experiencing life, rather than death.
@pogmog
@pogmog 10 жыл бұрын
All of these bias-orientated videos seem to be a soft explanation of the hermeneutic circle. Why doesn't Big Think cut to the chase and just have someone talk about Heidegger's philosophy, which, despite being many decades old, is much more robust.
@commonman80
@commonman80 10 жыл бұрын
I think his Interpretation of "Biases" is a stretch. Be it Cognitive or Subliminal.
@killerlion241
@killerlion241 10 жыл бұрын
interesting topic i can highly recommend the book "The Art of Thinking Clearly" to everybody of you it names and describes many biases
@Lukejohningram
@Lukejohningram 7 жыл бұрын
Not making a mistake, hmm like starting a world war? Cool vid
@PeterKnagge
@PeterKnagge 3 жыл бұрын
WW2 was about terrritory/power/money and not anything to do with morals as history tells us. Wars aren't as simple as good guy/bad guy, and are normally a fight about whom can be the most greedy. There's a lot more to German history than just WW2. The "Allies" did much worse things, and the US started The Great Depression and funded dictators and state sponsored terrorism. May the farce be with you! Stay safe and good luck!
@JingleThug
@JingleThug 10 жыл бұрын
Bruce Willis?
@Kube_Dog
@Kube_Dog 6 жыл бұрын
He can't even look at the right camera...
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