I’ve been revisiting a book that has been on my shelf now for about 15 years (and fairly well thumbed in that time). It’s by Scott Plous and is called ‘The psychology of judgment and decision-making’. An interesting read, covering the ways that psychologists have devised to test, experiment and hypothesise about how we perceive, think and come to decisions. It is built around practical and academic examples of the results from cognitive psychology research, so that narrows the presuppositions of its thesis, but the chapter I’ve been reviewing is about ‘behavioral traps’ in decision-making, and I thought it would be of interest to the readers of this blog. A behavioural, or social, trap is
“a situation in which individuals or groups embark on a promising course of action that later becomes undesirable and difficult to escape from.” (Plous, 1993, p. 241).
Speaking of behavioural traps (that is, erroneous action), Plous used Cross and Guyer’s (1980) taxonomy of ‘countertraps’, in which sometimes we avoid certain useful behaviours (sins of omission) and ‘traps’, in which sometimes we undertake potentially harmful actions (sins of commission). He then presents 5 types (these are seen as individual thinking traps, as opposed to group traps such as groupthink) which may intertwine or overlap but which have distinct origins:
- Time delay traps as a trap, this would be doing something you see as positive in the short-term but which will have negative consequences in the future. As a countertrap, this would be avoiding doing something which in the long-term would have a positive benefit (such as, for example, going to the dentist for a check-up) because it is unpleasant in the short term. Time delay traps are often known about.
- Ignorance traps Here the negative consequences of one’s actions are not known or cannot be easily predicted at the time. Plous here cites the use of DDT in the United States in the 1940s and follows the ‘unforeseen events’ that followed from this, namely the effect on the food chain of the mass use of pesticides. The premises of this behavioural trap are problematic from a systems thinking perspective (see critique below).
- Investment traps Plous includes this kind of trap as an illustration of how people tend to adopt certain behaviours after investments of time or money, or other sunk costs, have already been made. You’ve just spent 10 months of your life and 90% of your budget preparing and planning to launch a brand new product with a feature that no-one else in the market has got. You hear that an unknown competitor, with a superior product that has exactly the same new feature that your product has. Do you abandon your project, or do you push on regardless? Or, let’s say that you’ve paid full price for your MBA tuition. Will you be more committed than someone else in your group who was given a 40% discount? Research, says Plous, tends to show that the higher the investment the more likely there will be commitment to action.
- Deterioration traps similar to investment traps, but when what starts out as what was rewarding at first gradually becomes less and less so, sometimes with disastrous results. The example given by Plous is of heroin use, but one wonders whether the current debate around the growing use of pay-day loan companies in the UK has some common ground with this idea. Whenever we find ourselves with a kind of dependency on the chase for the original “thing”, when the chase replaces the reward and becomes it, then we are in a deterioration trap.
- Collective traps involving more than just you, a collective trap is where the “pursuit of individual self-interest results in adverse consequences for the collective” (p. 246) and has, according to Plous, been much studied. The tragedy of the commons is perhaps the most well-known example, though another classic example given is that of the Prisoner’s Dilemma. I have used a variation of this, called Red-Green, with groups in workshops on occasion, though now do so only rarely because it is just so incendiary if you use it only once.
These all present us with a convenient way of slicing the world of behaviours up, and perhaps also of explaining these behaviours also. I can see the first but doubt the latter unless the thinking behind seeing the world as needing to be understood these ways is also under scrutiny. And there is the real problem. The people who pronounce on what people do, and why, are just as prone to the same biases in their thinking, and just as laden with filters, as their subjects upon whom they experiment. So there is more work to be done, and more reason for all of you to keep an open mind.
References
Cross, J. G., Guyer, M. J. (1980) Social Traps, University of Michigan Press
Plous, S. (1993) The Psychology of Judgment and Decision Making, McGraw-Hill
Dear Chris,
This is a thorough classification. The next and (not possible in my view) to answer question is – can you educate people to become better leaders or just to become leaders ?
Regards, Alexey Telitsyn
Thanks, Alexey. I personally doubt that the list is exhaustive, and in fact it probably only scratches one surface of a geometrically complex subject.
You ask a question but then say that you don’t think it can be answered. I’m curious as to why you think that. Do you mean when you say “better” that they would be more effective or that they would be morally superior? Or something else?
My own view is that the definitions of “leader” are so numerous and so divergent that the meaning of the word is too diluted, and so I would have to have a way of indicating what version of ‘leader’ I was thinking about in order to address the question.
Chris – thank you for sharing. As I was reading this, my mind turned to a book that appears to admirably juxtapose Plous’, titled “The Implementation Game: What happens after a bill becomes a law” (Eugene Bardach). Instead of evaluating behavioural traps from the perspective of being trapped (i.e. the trappee), it looks at organisation behaviours that allow someone to trap (i.e. the trapper). Its an interesting read, especially when viewing from the trappee position …
On an aside, I have had to re-write organisation and behaviour three times in typing the above. This America malarkey is beginning to take its toll ….