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Sunday, October 27, 2024

Intuition vs "Rational" thought

There was a very short vignette in the very beginning of either Gladwell's book Blink or Kahneman's book Thinking Fast and Slow.

Two policemen are sitting in their cruiser. It is a hot night in LA and they have the windows down. It had rained recently.

A man in a floppy coat is walking toward the cruiser's driver's side door.

The policeman who was riding "shotgun" glanced over at the person approaching the cruiser, unholstered his weapon, extended it in front of his partner and discharged it through the open window. The bullets struck the approaching man and killed him.

Much excitement followed. EMTs found a sawed-off shotgun beneath the dead man's floppy coat. The patrol car's shotgun was still in the rack.

Presumably, had the cop hesitated, both cops could have been shot and probably died.

The message that I get from this very short story

Bayes' Theorem applies to unfiltered data. Bayes' Theorem is a mathematical representation of the amount of information that is available in each incremental piece of data.

A plot that illustrates the concept that the first data-points remove more of the total uncertainty than the later points
Information is the removal of uncertainty. The first piece of unfiltered data removes the largest percentage of uncertainty of any of the data points but it is a small fraction of the total uncertainty. The second piece of data removes slightly less of the initial uncertainty that the first piece removed...the one-thousandth piece of data removes much less uncertainty then the first piece of data but slightly more than the one-thousand-and-first piece.

The idea of well-calibrated intuition is that the curve is not a voluptuous curve but is almost a square-wave.

Our brains automatically filter the incoming data and fast-tracks the most important chunks. We don't randomly evaluate a loaf of bread a single slice at a time. We scan the loaf and make an instant decision if we see any mold or places where a rodent chewed on it.

The cop who shot the gunman was never able to verbalize exactly what he saw that made him draw his service weapon and fire it. Part of that was probably due to his brain's need for maximum cognitive processing so it turned off all superfluous processing...which would include his flight-recorder function (and auditory processing and peripheral vision). Many people who experienced trauma cannot recollect any details of the event.

I imagine that there were several factors that the cop saw in that first, split-second glance:

  • The dude was wearing a coat on a hot, humid Los Angeles night. Either he was hiding a weapon or drugs or was mentally ill
  • How the dude was resolutely walking in a straight line directly toward the cruiser (man on a mission)
  • Perhaps the cop could hear him splashing through a puddle.
  • How the man was holding his arms
  • Maybe there was enough light to see his facial expression

Was there a significant chance that the cop would have shot an innocent, unarmed man? Absolutely! But in this case, the evidence was that the man was carrying a lethal weapon.

The summary

While our intuitions can be ill-formed and can lie to us, they are less likely to do so than our conscious, "rational" thought.

Our conscious, "rational" thought processes complex information iteratively. It reaches decisions by "combing" due to capacity limitations in the human "buffer".

Our rational thought unconsciously discounts information that makes us uncomfortable and over-weights information that is in alignment with what we think is correct. Since these discounts and over-weights are applied at each iteration, the uncomfortable information is discounted to zero ( 0.80 ^ 10 = 0.1 ) and the information that makes us comfortable gets over-weighted into total dominance ( 1.2 ^ 10 = 6 ). In this model of "rational thought", after 10 iterations the information that makes us uncomfortable has 1/60th of the influence that the comfortable information does.

Viewed through this lens, the reason why a candidate gives us the ick is not as important as the fact that the candidate elicits a strong ICK! reaction in us. Perhaps the candidate's hand motions remind us of somebody pulling the wings off of flies or maliciously dragging their fingernails down a chalk-board. Maybe their voice pushes buttons in your head. Maybe it is how they structure sentences. Maybe it is how they drag-out certain vowel sounds 

The reason is not important. Your visceral reaction is. You don't have to 'splain why you feel a certain way. Trust your gut. It has a harder time lying to you than your "rational" thought process.

I hope it is obvious that this essay has MUCH wider application than picking a political candidate.

13 comments:

  1. What do we actually know here, Joe? Could it be the cop knew the perp? Remember, 80% of the crime is committed by the same 20% of the people.

    Something sounds hokey here…

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    1. That is entirely possible. The story was a very short story.

      It is possible that the cop was doinking the dead-man's wife.

      Have you ever had strong, visceral reactions to clients or coworkers? They can be positive "Hey, he is my-people" or negative "This guy will screw me if he can"

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    2. Yes, the sixth sense has saved me often...it also saved a bunch of other people. I don't have to accept battle every time it is offered. I try to avoid places and people that make battle more likely. A small vicious part of me lusts for battle and is sick of being careful. A large prudent part of me keeps the little monster under control. Someday he might agree with the little one and draw the sword too. Then the sixth sense will help select targets.

      Delete
  2. I've a few scars from ignoring that "odd feeling" it was time to leave.

    Pity social programming (Diversity is Love and all that) gets way too many folks to ignore the behaviors (or "tells" as police might tell you) gets so many dead or worse young ladies in the last few years.

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  3. Only intuition can protect us from the most dangerous individual of all, the articulate incompetent. Robert Bernstein 1925. I thought of that often with Obama. Woody




    b

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  4. I read a story much like that one. The perp in the back seat had gotten his hands in front and was going for a gun missed in the pat down. The officer in front shot through the seat in a blur of speed. He was tried for murder, as no one thought he could have seen and reacted to a threat that fast.

    I wasn't taught to trust my gut. But I've learned to trust it implicitly. God gave us that for a reason.

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  5. I had learned the story as a relation of Darwins laws... in our days roaming the jungle, if you didn't flinch when the bushes rustled, sometimes the lion got to eat you. Gradually this inferrence created our sense of intuition and ability to stereotype.
    Not EVERY hoodrat looking city resident is a bad guy, but... if you cross the street you definitely won't get mugged.

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  6. I have had a long road to reaching the point of learning to trust my initial impression, based (I suppose) in a place where I had come to believe that I could have little confidence in my own decisions. Turns out you can: I have come more and more to rely on those first impressions.

    Along with this, I suppose, the idea is implicit that once you have these initial intuitions, one needs to act on them.

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  7. Precisely why I have you in my reader. Wisdom. Thanks!

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    Replies
    1. You are too kind.

      I think it is a matter of even a blind squirrel finding an acorn if it looks long enough.

      Thanks for commenting.

      -Joe

      Delete
  8. Years ago I was flying my plane into an airport where I had landed a number of times before. While on short final I added power and pulled up, aborting the landing. My brother-in-law (instructor pilot) was in the right seat and asked why I had gone around.
    I said, "I don't know.. It just didn't feel right."
    He said, "Good call."
    We flew the pattern and landed normally on the next try. We probably would have been fine had I gone ahead and landed the first time.
    But...

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  9. Here is a personal story that may be relevant to the post. In April of 2007 I was visiting a woman who lived in a questionable neighborhood. We were sitting on a couch watching a video, the couch being place with it's back to the front door. I was carrying a Sig P220 inside the waistband and it was getting uncomfortable so I removed the gun and holster and put them on a table about ten feet away. Suddenly people came through the front door, The next thing I was aware of I was at the little table with my pistol in my hand coming up into my stance. I had the vision and auditory changes so many have reported. The woman said later that they were speaking, but I didn't hear a word. I was aware that there was more than one person but I only clearly saw the first one and I noticed the middle three white buttons on his maroon shirt. I had picked the spot where I was going to shoot him, but they ran before my pistol was fully up. There was no doubt in my mind what I was going to do.
    The woman told me she didn't know what scared her more, the intruders or the look on my face. I started taking her to the range the next week and bought her a gun.
    This has stayed with me in vivid detail ever since. The biggest thing I took away from it was certainty. Self defense was an interest of mine and I practiced a lot with pistols, but I was never sure how I would react if it ever became necessary. After the incident I knew what I was capable of and whether or not I would hesitate in a moment of crisis

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  10. God gave us the tools.

    Obviously, for a reason.

    Look and listen for the clues, provided by God.

    Act, or react, in accordance with His instructions.

    You'll be better off.

    ReplyDelete

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