How can I avoid falling into the stereotyping trap?

Answer: Watch this moving TED video by Chimamanda Adichie

How can I make better decisions?

Answer: Conduct a “premortem” just before you decide to go ahead with an important decision.

 


Gary Klein, author of  Sources of Power: How People Make Decisions, thought up the premortem idea. He spells out why and how to do a premortem in this Harvard Business Review article:

Performing a Project Premortem


Daniel Kahneman glowingly describes the premortem technique in his book Thinking, Fast and Slow. He writes:

“The procedure is simple: When the organization has almost come to an important decision but has not formally committed itself, Klein proposes gathering for a brief session a group of individuals who are knowledgeable about the decision.

The premise of the session is a short speech:

‘Imagine that we are a year into the future. We implemented the plan as it now exists The outcome was a disaster. Please take 5 to 10 minutes to write a brief history of that disaster.’

Gary Klein’s idea of the premortem usually evokes immediate enthusiasm. After I described it casually at a session in Davos, someone behind me muttered, “It was worth coming to Davos just for this!” (I later noticed the speaker was the CEO of a major international corporation.)

The premortem has two main advantages: it overcomes the groupthink that affects many teams once a decision  appears to be made, and it unleashes the imagination of knowledgeable individuals in a much needed direction. . .The main virtue of the premortem is that is legitimizes doubts.  Furthermore, it encourages even supporters of the decision to search for possible threats that they had not considered earlier.” (p 264-5)

Kahneman again explains the technique  in this video–watch from 12 minutes 17 seconds:

How can I avoid making the common errors of human judgment?

Answer: Listen to Charlie Munger, Warren Buffet’s partner in Berkshire Hathaway, deliver this highly practical, well-illustrated lecture on the psychology of human misjudgment:

In 1995, Charlie Munger addressed students at the Harvard Law School on the issue of psychology of human misjudgement. The lecture is a real treasure!

THE PSYCHOLOGY OF HUMAN MISJUDGMENT

(When the page opens, click on the audio link.)

To access the transcript of the lecture, click here.

And click here to read an essay Charlie Munger wrote around the same time entitled Turning $2 Million Into $2 Trillion where he explains how Coca-Cola has put known psychological principles to good use to create a business success phenomenon (and how Coca Cola would have been even more successful if they had avoided some of the common errors of misjudgment).

Logic fallacies explained: Ad hominem or attacking the person

How can I learn to think more rationally?

Answer: Watch these excellent video to learn how:

What are the common cognitive biases and logic fallacies I probably suffer from without realizing?

Answer: There are heaps of these — maybe a hundred or so? Watch these videos to learn about some of them.

A fun song introduction to the common cognitive biases:

This video uses someone’s short speech to illustrate several common biases:

This video explains how we are biased towards seeing patterns and order where none exists:

This video explains how we are biased towards living in the pleasurable present rather than working towards a sensible future:

How can I solve problems better?

Answer: Identify the best strategy (algorithm) to help you think your way through the problem.

There is an infinite number of problems for us to solve but just a relatively small number of strategies needed to solve those problems. If we can learn those clever problem-solving strategies and know when to apply those strategies, we’ll be much better at solving problems.

Examples of clever strategies for solving various problems:

1.  What is the best strategy to use to solve this famous “Einstein puzzle”:

  1. There are five houses.
  2. The Englishman lives in the red house.
  3. The Spaniard owns the dog.
  4. Coffee is drunk in the green house.
  5. The Ukrainian drinks tea.
  6. The green house is immediately to the right of the ivory house.
  7. The Old Gold smoker owns snails.
  8. Kools are smoked in the yellow house.
  9. Milk is drunk in the middle house.
  10. The Norwegian lives in the first house.
  11. The man who smokes Chesterfields lives in the house next to the man with the fox.
  12. Kools are smoked in the house next to the house where the horse is kept. (should be “… a house …”, see Discussion section)
  13. The Lucky Strike smoker drinks orange juice.
  14. The Japanese smokes Parliaments.
  15. The Norwegian lives next to the blue house.

Now, who drinks water? Who owns the zebra? In the interest of clarity, it must be added that each of the five houses is painted a different color, and their inhabitants are of different national extractions, own different pets, drink different beverages and smoke different brands of American cigarettes. One other thing: in statement 6, right means your right.— Life International, December 17, 1962

You can spend lots of frustrating hours or days thrashing your way through to a answer–or,more likely, you’ll get so tied up in knots you give up.

Or you can apply a simple organizational strategy that guides you to the answer in about ten minutes.

Click here for the clever strategy.


2.  What is the best strategy for solving this type of problem:

How would you prepare 500 mL of a 1:35 bleach solution from a 1:10 bleach solution using water?

You have come down with a bad case of the geebies, but fortunately your grandmother has a sure cure. She gives you an eyedropper bottle labeled:

Take 1 drop per 15 lb of body weight per dose four times a day until the geebies are gone. Contains gr 8 heebie bark per dr 100 solvent. 60 drops=1 tsp.

You weigh 128 lb, and the 4-oz bottle is half-full. You test the eyedropper and find there are actually 64 drops in a teaspoon. You are going on a three-week trip and are deeply concerned that you might run out of granny’s geebie tonic. Do you need to see her before leaving to get a refill?

(problems from Medication Math Problems)

This type of problem crops up often in daily living and is especially common for nurses. They are mathematically challenging, unless you know a strategy for solving them.

This is a  good strategy: apply dimensional analysis

A Guide to Dimensional Analysis

What are some fun ways to grow my brain?

Answer 1: Learn how to juggle.

Learning to juggle boosts brain connections by making structural changes in the white matter of the brain.
This plain English article gives all the details:  Juggling Boosts Brain Connections
Or click here to read the original scientific paper.

How can I learn to juggle?

Watch this 2-minute video:

How can I learn to become more rational?

Answer: First, try to accept the uncomfortable truth that you (and every other human being) will often think irrationally.


Watch these videos to see our irrational behavior in action:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=742njAU-NCc


What is the best way to teach?

Answer:  Apply teaching principles that fit with how the mind learns.

Roger Schank explains in this video:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PKuaWl3v1yo