The lies we tell ourselves - the framing effect

in #psychology8 years ago

You're in the supermarket doing your weekly food shopping and you stop by the meat section. You're planning to make a delicious spaghetti bolognese and you need some minced beef for the recipe.

There are two options to choose from: one is labelled "80% lean" while the other is labelled "20% fat". Because you care about your health and like to eat healthy food, you take the minced beef labelled "80%" lean.

Congratulations! You've just fallen victim to the framing effect!

quote

Life and death situation

Amos Tversky and Daniel Kahneman (1981) performed and experiment where participants were asked to choose between two treatments for 600 people affected by a deadly disease.

The first treatment was predicted to result in 400 deaths. The second treatment had a 33% chance that no-one would die, but a 66% chance that everyone would die.

It was presented to the participants either using positive framing, focusing on how many would live, or negative framing, focusing on how many would die.

72% of participants chose the first treatment when it was presented positively, but only 22% when it was framed negatively.

The dihydrogen monoxide hoax

In a 1983 April Fool's edition of the Durand Express it was reported that "dihydrogen monoxide" had been found in the city's water pipes, and warned that it was fatal if inhaled.

When the chemical is presented as shown above, the reaction can be strong. In 1997 a 14-year-old high schools student gathered 43 votes out of 50 to ban the chemical.

There have been several similarly extreme responses, even including politicians supporting a ban on the chemical.

The hoax, of course, is that dihydrogen monoxide is the chemical nomenclature for water! When presenting the facts about water differently, it sounds extremely dangerous, provoking a strong response.

What can we do about it?

Framing involves taking factual information and presenting it in a different form to trigger an emotional response.

Try to consider the logical implications of what's being asked. Often framing presents only a couple of options while in reality, more might exist.


Banner image by Bart Everson used under the CC-BY-2.0 license. Changes were made to the original.

Water image by avocadogirlfriend used under the CC-BY-2.0 license.


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The polarization of society spreads because of the lack of knowledge. Confirmation bias, cognitive dissonance and rational thinking is truly not understood, likely due to the education system being designed back in the days when it purpose was to produce good factory workers.

I think these subjects are still considered part of a psychology or social science syllabus, so only those in higher education have an opportunity to be exposed to it. You're right though in what you're implying: these topics should be taught to be understood because they have a big impact on our lives.

Dihydrogen monoxide - wonder how many Steemians will not get that that is Oxygen + Hyrodgen2 aka WATER (H20)

If they read to the end they will....but that's a big if :)

Reading to the end was easy. You're a good storyteller.

Dihydrogen monoxide ... This is a good one to pull on your friends, it does sound scary .. but hey, the media does all the time if you listen carefully, sometimes they use words that mean absolutely nothing, but sound learned.

Absolutely. The key is to use facts presented in just the right way that it sounds like a great idea.

Bitcoins... dark net / dark web.... terrorists... pedophiles...

BAN BITCOINS!!!

Well written article. It shows how most people will just pick the choice that is positive Ghent actually think about the differences between the two choices.

Excellent post @bitcalm giving you a follow/upvote for that one! Hope you come and say Hi we have just launched our first edition :)

Nice post... Is like commercials...if they want you to think it is cheap at $399 they say...."under $400 " ..... If they want you to think it is valuable they say "almost $400"....