In this episode we are going to talk about how random dice rolls can influence judges to give people longer jail sentences, how so-called experts are massively influenced by completely random numbers – even when they explicitly deny it – and how you can better understand this crazy phenomenon – the Anchoring Effect.
As Nobel Laureate Daniel Kahneman puts it in his book Thinking Fast and Slow:
"The main moral of priming research is that our thoughts and our behavior are influenced, much more than we know or want, by the environment of the moment."
Arbitrary numbers and anchors can have huge implications for your decisions without you even realizing it and this all operates at a subconscious level beyond your conscious experience.
This episode is going to focus on drilling down and understanding a specific cognitive bias – a mental model – to help you start building a toolkit of mental models that will enable you to better understand reality.
Anchoring bias – along with Priming and Framing, which we have covered in previous episodes – are all cognitive biases that you want to know, understand, and be aware of – so that you can add them to your mental toolbox and make better decisions.
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How a Judge Literally Rolling Dice Could Get You Double The Jail Time - The Anchoring Effect | The Science of Success podcast - Listen or read transcript on Metacast