Psychology
In psychology, priority heuristics correctly predict classic violations ofPriority heuristic
For illustrative purposes consider a choice between two simple gambles of the type “a chance ''c'' of winning monetary amount ''x''; a chance (100 - ''c'') of winning amount ''y''.” A choice between two such gambles contain four reasons for choosing: the maximum gain, the minimum gain, and their respective chances; because chances are complementary, three reasons remain: the minimum gain, the chance of the minimum gain, and the maximum gain. For choices between gambles in which all outcomes are positive or 0, the priority heuristic consists of the following three steps (for all other choices see Brandstätter et al. 2006): Priority rule: Go through reasons in the order of minimum gain, the chance of minimum gain, and maximum gain. Stopping rule: Stop examination if the minimum gains differ by 1/10 (or more) of the maximum gain; otherwise, stop examination if chances differ by 10% (or more). Decision rule: Choose the gamble with the more attractive gain (chance). The term “attractive” refers to the gamble with the higher (minimum or maximum) gain and to the lower chance of the minimum gain.Examples
Consider the following two choice problems, which were developed to supportEmpirical support and limitations
The priority heuristic correctly predicted the majority choice in all (one-stage) gambles in Kahneman and Tversky (1979). Across four different data sets with a total of 260 problems, the heuristic predicted the majority choice better than (a)Production
In production priority heuristics help optimize the execution of jobs, seeSee also
*References
External links
* http://library.mpib-berlin.mpg.de/ft/eb/EB_Priority_2006.pdf Heuristics