The influence of affect on suboptimal strategy choice in the Monty Hall dilemma

The Monty Hall dilemma (MHD) presents an intriguing choice anomaly that offers insight into human reasoning. It presents a specific subclass of decision tasks that require the adequate use of Bayes theorem in order to make optimal decisions. In the MHD, participants are presented with three...

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Main Authors: Efendic Emir, Drace Sasa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Drustvo Psihologa Srbije 2015-01-01
Series:Psihologija
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.doiserbia.nb.rs/img/doi/0048-5705/2015/0048-57051502135E.pdf
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spelling doaj-cd4ec218353a4b7a979760de2a3646442020-11-25T02:16:11ZengDrustvo Psihologa SrbijePsihologija0048-57051451-92832015-01-0148213514710.2298/PSI1502135E0048-57051502135EThe influence of affect on suboptimal strategy choice in the Monty Hall dilemmaEfendic Emir0Drace Sasa1University of Bordeaux, Laboratoire de Psychologie, Bordeaux, France + University of Sarajevo, Faculty of Philosophy, Department of Psychology, Sarajevo, Bosnia and HerzegovinaUniversity of Sarajevo, Faculty of Philosophy, Department of Psychology, Sarajevo, Bosnia and HerzegovinaThe Monty Hall dilemma (MHD) presents an intriguing choice anomaly that offers insight into human reasoning. It presents a specific subclass of decision tasks that require the adequate use of Bayes theorem in order to make optimal decisions. In the MHD, participants are presented with three doors with only one door hiding the prize. After their initial choice of a door, they are offered additional information. A different door (one that does not hide the prize and one not chosen by the participant) is opened to reveal nothing behind it. Afterwards, the participants are offered to stay with their initial choice or to switch to the other remaining door. The better strategy is to always switch; a counterintuitive one for most people. We examine the notorious difficulty of the MHD from an affective perspective while relying on the dual processing approach to thinking. We varied participants’ reliance on their affective reactions as opposed to a neutral condition and hypothesized that the affective reactions associated with the staying option contribute to worse performance on the task. Indeed, the participants in the affective condition chose the staying option more often than our control participants. Using the MHD as an appropriate paradigm of conditional probability reasoning we show that, for this type of task, an affective strategy is highly inefficient. We attribute these results to the affective reactions associated with the staying option, with regret avoidance associated with the switch option, and the conditional probability construction of the dilemma.http://www.doiserbia.nb.rs/img/doi/0048-5705/2015/0048-57051502135E.pdfMonty Hall dilemmaaffect heuristicconditional probabilitydual processing theories
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Efendic Emir
Drace Sasa
spellingShingle Efendic Emir
Drace Sasa
The influence of affect on suboptimal strategy choice in the Monty Hall dilemma
Psihologija
Monty Hall dilemma
affect heuristic
conditional probability
dual processing theories
author_facet Efendic Emir
Drace Sasa
author_sort Efendic Emir
title The influence of affect on suboptimal strategy choice in the Monty Hall dilemma
title_short The influence of affect on suboptimal strategy choice in the Monty Hall dilemma
title_full The influence of affect on suboptimal strategy choice in the Monty Hall dilemma
title_fullStr The influence of affect on suboptimal strategy choice in the Monty Hall dilemma
title_full_unstemmed The influence of affect on suboptimal strategy choice in the Monty Hall dilemma
title_sort influence of affect on suboptimal strategy choice in the monty hall dilemma
publisher Drustvo Psihologa Srbije
series Psihologija
issn 0048-5705
1451-9283
publishDate 2015-01-01
description The Monty Hall dilemma (MHD) presents an intriguing choice anomaly that offers insight into human reasoning. It presents a specific subclass of decision tasks that require the adequate use of Bayes theorem in order to make optimal decisions. In the MHD, participants are presented with three doors with only one door hiding the prize. After their initial choice of a door, they are offered additional information. A different door (one that does not hide the prize and one not chosen by the participant) is opened to reveal nothing behind it. Afterwards, the participants are offered to stay with their initial choice or to switch to the other remaining door. The better strategy is to always switch; a counterintuitive one for most people. We examine the notorious difficulty of the MHD from an affective perspective while relying on the dual processing approach to thinking. We varied participants’ reliance on their affective reactions as opposed to a neutral condition and hypothesized that the affective reactions associated with the staying option contribute to worse performance on the task. Indeed, the participants in the affective condition chose the staying option more often than our control participants. Using the MHD as an appropriate paradigm of conditional probability reasoning we show that, for this type of task, an affective strategy is highly inefficient. We attribute these results to the affective reactions associated with the staying option, with regret avoidance associated with the switch option, and the conditional probability construction of the dilemma.
topic Monty Hall dilemma
affect heuristic
conditional probability
dual processing theories
url http://www.doiserbia.nb.rs/img/doi/0048-5705/2015/0048-57051502135E.pdf
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