Decision fatigue

Decision fatigue
Candy and snacks are placed close to market cash registers to take advantage of shoppers' decision fatigue.[1]

In decision making and psychology, decision fatigue refers to the deteriorating quality of decisions made by an individual, after a long session of decision making.[1][2] It is now understood as one of the causes of irrational trade-offs in decision making.[2] For instance, judges in court have been shown to make poorer decisions later in the day.[1][3] Decision fatigue may also lead to consumers making poor choices with their purchases.

There is a paradox in that "people who lack choices seem to want them and often will fight for them"; yet at the same time, "people find that making many choices can be [psychologically] aversive." [4]

Contents

Effects

Reduced ability to make trade-offs

When consumers visit car dealerships, they may feel overwhelmed by all of the different financing, upgrades, and warranty options.

Trade-offs, where either of two choices have positive and negative elements, are an advanced and energy-consuming form of decision making. A person who is mentally depleted becomes reluctant to make trade-offs, or makes very poor choices.[1] Jonathan Levav at Stanford University designed experiments showing how decision fatigue can leave a person vulnerable to sales and marketing strategies designed to time the sale.[1] "Decision fatigue helps explain why ordinarily sensible people...can't resist the dealer's offer to rustproof their new car." [5]

Dean Spears of Princeton University has argued that decision fatigue caused by the constant need to make financial trade-offs is a major factor in trapping people in poverty. Given that financial situations force the poor to make so many trade-offs, they are left with less mental energy for other activities.[1]

Decision paralysis

Decision fatigue can result not only in fast and careless decisions but even in decision paralysis, where no decision is made at all.[6] Research by Iyengar and Lepper (2000) "found that people who had more choices were often less willing to decide to buy anything at all, and their subsequent satisfaction was lower when they had been confronted with 24 or 30 options than when they faced six options"; which "suggest[s] that choice, to the extent that it requires greater decision-making among options, can become burdensome and ultimately counterproductive."[4] In the formal approach to decision quality management, specific techniques have been devised to help managers cope with decision fatigue.[7]

Impulse purchasing

Decision fatigue can influence irrational impulse purchases at supermarkets. During a trip to the supermarket, trade-off decisions regarding prices and promotions can produce decision fatigue, hence by the time the shopper reaches the cash register, less willpower remains to resist impulse purchases of candy and sugared items. Sweet snacks are usually featured at the cash register because many shoppers have decision fatigue by the time they get there. Florida State University social psychologist Roy Baumeister has also found that it is directly tied to low glucose levels, and that replenishing them restores the ability to make effective decisions. This has been offered as an explanation for why poor shoppers are more likely to eat during their trips.[1]

Researcher Carol Dweck found "that while decision fatigue does occur, it primarily affects those who believe that willpower runs out quickly." She states that "people get fatigued or depleted after a taxing task only when they believe that willpower is a limited resource, but not when they believe it's not so limited". She notes that "in some cases, the people who believe that willpower is not so limited actually perform better after a taxing task."[8]

Impaired self-regulation

Long, late-night meetings can leave participants in a decision-fatigued condition, which may lead to ill-advised romantic liaisons. A scene from the LeWeb conference, 2010 is shown here.

The "process of choosing may itself drain some of the self’s precious resources, thereby leaving the executive function less capable of carrying out its other activities. Decision fatigue can therefore impair self-regulation".[4] "[S]ome degree of failure at self regulation" is at the root of "[m]ost major personal and social problems", such as debt, "underachievement at work and school" and lack of exercise.[9]

Experiments have shown the interrelationship between decision fatigue and ego depletion, whereby a person's ability for self-control against impulses decreases in the face of decision fatigue.[10]

George Loewenstein has suggested that the disastrous failure of men in high office to control impulses in their private lives may at times be attributed to decision fatigue stemming from the burden of day-to-day decision making.[10] Similarly, Tierney notes that "C.F.O.'s [are] prone to disastrous dalliances late in the evening", after a long day of decision-making.[11]

Research shows the decisions judges make are extremely influenced by how long in the day it has been since their last break.[12]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Tierney, John (August 21, 2011). "Do You Suffer From Decision Fatigue?". New York Times Magazine. http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/21/magazine/do-you-suffer-from-decision-fatigue.html. Retrieved August 23, 2011. "But if a trip to the supermarket induces more decision fatigue in the poor than in the rich — because each purchase requires more mental trade-offs — by the time they reach the cash register, they’ll have less willpower left to resist the Mars bars and Skittles. Not for nothing are these items called impulse purchases." 
  2. ^ a b Baumeister, Roy F (2003), "The Psychology of Irrationality", in Brocas, Isabelle; Carrillo, Juan D, The Psychology of Economic Decisions: Rationality and well-being, pp. 1–15, ISBN 0-1992-5108-8 .
  3. ^ Danzigera, Shai; et al (Feb 25, 2011), "Extraneous factors in judicial decisions", Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, http://www.pnas.org/content/108/17/6889 .
  4. ^ a b c Kathleen D. Vohs; Roy F. Baumeister; Jean M. Twenge; Brandon J. Schmeichel; Dianne M. Tice; and Jennifer Crocker. "Decision Fatigue Exhausts Self-Regulatory Resources — But So Does Accommodating to Unchosen Alternatives".
  5. ^ Time. August 23, 2011. http://healthland.time.com/2011/08/23/mind-over-mind-decision-fatigue-may-deplete-our-willpower-but-only-if-we-let-it/#ixzz1WRGB2Bya. 
  6. ^ Saxena, PK (2009), Principles of Management: A Modern Approach, p. 89, ISBN 8-1907-9415-9 .
  7. ^ Mawby, William D (2004), Decision process quality management, p. 72, ISBN 0-8738-9633-5 .
  8. ^ Time. August 23, 2011. http://healthland.time.com/2011/08/23/mind-over-mind-decision-fatigue-may-deplete-our-willpower-but-only-if-we-let-it/#ixzz1WRGhCTM0. 
  9. ^ Baumeister, Roy. "Ego Depletion and Self-Control Failure: An Energy Model of the Self ’s Executive Function". Self and Identity, 1: 129±136, 2002
  10. ^ a b Loewenstein, George (2003), Time and decision: economic and psychological perspectives on intertemporal choice, p. 208, ISBN 0-8715-4549-7 .
  11. ^ Time. August 23, 2011. http://healthland.time.com/2011/08/23/mind-over-mind-decision-fatigue-may-deplete-our-willpower-but-only-if-we-let-it/#ixzz1WRHFy9R3. 
  12. ^ "We find that the percentage of favorable rulings drops gradually from ≈65% to nearly zero within each decision session and returns abruptly to ≈65% after a break." Shai Danzigera; Jonathan Levav; Liora Avnaim-Pessoa (11 April 2011). "Extraneous factors in judicial decisions". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. http://www.pnas.org/content/108/17/6889. Retrieved 15 November 2011. 

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Decision making — For Decision making in groups, see Group decision making. Sample flowchart representing the decision process to add a new article to Wikipedia. Decision making can be regarded as the mental processes (cognitive process) resulting in the selection …   Wikipedia

  • threat fatigue — (THRET fuh.teeg) n. Ignoring or downplaying possible threats because one has been subjected to constant warnings about those threats. Example Citation: Over all, the decision against a public alert represents a significant shift in the thinking… …   New words

  • information fatigue syndrome — n. The weariness and stress that result from having to deal with excessive amounts of information. Also: IFS. Example Citation: Psychologist Dr David Lewis, who was involved in preparing the report, suggested that a new phenomenon, information… …   New words

  • Clinical decision support system — (CDSS or CDS) is an interactive decision support system (DSS) Computer Software, which is designed to assist physicians and other health professionals with decision making tasks, as determining diagnosis of patient data. A working definition has… …   Wikipedia

  • Somnolence — Classification and external resources ICD 10 R40.0 ICD 9 780.09 Somnolence (or drowsiness …   Wikipedia

  • particular — [[t]pə(r)tɪ̱kjʊlə(r)[/t]] ♦♦ 1) ADJ: ADJ n (emphasis) You use particular to emphasize that you are talking about one thing or one kind of thing rather than other similar ones. I remembered a particular story about a postman who was a murderer...… …   English dictionary

  • Syndrome d'épuisement professionnel — Pour les articles homonymes, voir burnout et épuisement. Syndrome d épuisement professionnel Classification et ressources externes …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Michael Johnson — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Johnson. Michael Johnson …   Wikipédia en Français

  • tête — [ tɛt ] n. f. • teste, test « crâne », opposé à l a. fr. chef « tête », 1050; lat. méd. testa « boîte crânienne », sens spécialisé de « coquille dure » → 1. test I ♦ 1 ♦ Partie, extrémité antérieure (et supérieure chez les animaux à station… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Burn-out — Syndrome d épuisement professionnel Pour les articles homonymes, voir burnout et épuisement. Syndrome d épuisement professionnel CIM 10 : Z73.0 …   Wikipédia en Français

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”