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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Cognitive and Human Factors in Expert Decision Making: Six Fallacies and the Eight Sources of Bias

Itiel E. Dror
- 08 Jun 2020 - 
- Vol. 92, Iss: 12, pp 7998-8004
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TLDR
Eight sources of bias are discussed and conceptualized, and specific measures that can minimize these biases are concluded.
Abstract
Fallacies about the nature of biases have shadowed a proper cognitive understanding of biases and their sources, which in turn lead to ways that minimize their impact. Six such fallacies are presented: it is an ethical issue, only applies to "bad apples", experts are impartial and immune, technology eliminates bias, blind spot, and the illusion of control. Then, eight sources of bias are discussed and conceptualized within three categories: (A) factors that relate to the specific case and analysis, which include the data, reference materials, and contextual information, (B) factors that relate to the specific person doing the analysis, which include past experience base rates, organizational factors, education and training, and personal factors, and lastly, (C) cognitive architecture and human nature that impacts all of us. These factors can impact what the data are (e.g., how data are sampled and collected, or what is considered as noise and therefore disregarded), the actual results (e.g., decisions on testing strategies, how analysis is conducted, and when to stop testing), and the conclusions (e.g., interpretation of the results). The paper concludes with specific measures that can minimize these biases.

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Citations
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Mis)use of scientific measurements in forensic science.

TL;DR: Four common flaws in error rate studies are presented and a corrected experimental design is provided that quantifies error rates more accurately, undermining the credibility and accuracy of error rates reported in studies.
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Part 1: The need for peer review in digital forensics

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Chemical instrumental analysis versus human evaluation to measure sensory properties of dairy products: What is fit for purpose?

TL;DR: In this review, fundamental considerations for any analyses are first presented as generic context, and Mechanics of sensory measurement are briefly explained with a focus on the key compound classes in dairy.
References
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Cognitive biases associated with medical decisions: a systematic review

TL;DR: Overconfidence, the anchoring effect, information and availability bias, and tolerance to risk may be associated with diagnostic inaccuracies or suboptimal management.
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TL;DR: Recent advances in the understanding of the neural sources and targets of expectations in perception are reviewed and Bayesian theories of perception that prescribe how an agent should integrate prior knowledge and sensory information are discussed.
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TL;DR: The role of fluency is more nuanced than previously believed and that understanding fluency could be of critical importance to understanding cognition more generally.
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Cognitive psychology: Rare items often missed in visual searches

TL;DR: It is shown here that target rarity leads to disturbingly inaccurate performance in target detection: if observers do not find what they are looking for fairly frequently, they often fail to notice it when it does appear.
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What are the Human Factors in Decision Making?

The paper discusses eight sources of bias in decision making, which include factors related to the specific case and analysis, factors related to the specific person doing the analysis, and factors related to cognitive architecture and human nature.