What puzzles and poker teach us about misinformation

(FINANCIAL TIMES) – Here is a holiday quiz question for you: What do puzzles, poker and misinformation have in common?

The answer is at the bottom of this column. Let’s try an easier question first.

In Santa’s workshop, if it takes five elves five minutes to wrap five presents, how long does it take 50 elves to wrap 50 presents?

You probably know the answer to that one; it follows a classic formula for a trick question.

But as you groped towards the correct answer, you may have had to fight off your instinct to blurt out a tempting wrong answer: 50 minutes.

The difficulty with this problem is pausing for the brief moment necessary to carry that arithmetic out, while fending off the obvious but incorrect answer that pops into your mind unbidden.

An even more famous example is the “bat and ball” question: If a bat and a ball together cost $1.10, and the bat costs a dollar more than the ball, how much does the ball cost?

Ten cents, screams the instinctive response, but it does not require a spreadsheet to work out that that is not right. It just requires one to stop and think (or to have heard the question before).

And here’s a less famous one: If you flip a coin three times, what is the probability of flipping at least two heads? A naive response is that two out of three flips need to come good, and the chance of that is one-third.

A more sophisticated response recognises that three coin flips produce eight possible combinations – so perhaps the probability is three out of eight?

Work through those eight combinations, however, and you realise the true chance is 50-50.

Often people see false claims and share them impulsively, not because they cannot figure out that the claims are false, but because they did not stop long enough to try.

Questions such as these are called cognitive reflection problems.

They were made famous by psychologist Daniel Kahneman in his book Thinking, Fast And Slow, but they were developed by the behavioural economist Shane Frederick. They vary in difficulty, but the ideal cognitive reflection problem has an answer that is simple, obvious and wrong – as well as a correct answer that is not too hard to calculate.

Behavioural scientists Gordon Pennycook and David Rand, sometimes working with other colleagues, have published studies drawing the connection between cognitive reflection problems and online misinformation.

Often people see false claims and share them impulsively, not because they cannot figure out that the claims are false, but because they did not stop long enough to try.

More on this topic

Spotting fake news, like realising the ball costs just five cents and the 50 elves wrap 50 presents in just five minutes, requires us to stop and think for a moment. And who has time for that these days?

Assistant Professor Pennycook and Associate Professor Rand have found that people who score higher on Professor Frederick’s cognitive reflection test also do better at distinguishing truth from politically partisan falsehood.

They also conducted a survey which found that most people were perfectly able to distinguish serious journalism from fake news.

When they amplified absurd headlines such as “Over 500 ‘Migrant Caravaners’ Arrested With Suicide Vests”, they did so not because they wanted to spread misinformation, nor because they themselves were unable to detect lies, but because in a world full of distractions, they had not really stopped to think.

Let’s move from puzzles to poker. To the uninitiated, poker is a game involving three elements: luck, calculation and deception.

But professional poker players have told me that a fourth element is just as important: controlling your emotions or, more often, failing to do so – in the lingo, “going on tilt”.

More on this topic

In her spellbinding foray into professional poker, The Biggest Bluff, psychologist Maria Konnikova describes “tilt” as “letting emotions – incidental ones that are not actually integral to your decision process – affect decision-making.”

This may mean blind rage, as in the tale of the gambler so incandescent that he rammed a billiard ball into his mouth, then realised he could not remove it.

But as Dr Konnikova points out, it may also be a positive emotion such as taking a liking to a fellow player, or feeling joy at winning a hand.

We cannot escape our emotions, but clear decision-making requires that we notice them and take them into account. And just as a poker player can go on tilt, so can any of us as we read the headlines or scroll through social media.

Indeed, we should expect those headlines to be “tilting”. Headline writers aim for impact, while social media thrives on emotional engagement from joy to fury.

More on this topic

“The goal,” writes Dr Konnikova, “is to learn to identify our emotions, analyse their cause, and if they’re not actually part of our rational decision process… dismiss them as sources of information.”

Good advice for poker players. But good advice for anyone doom-scrolling through Twitter or shouting at the radio during the morning news bulletin.

My advice is simply to take note of your emotional reaction to each headline, sound bite or statistical claim. Is it joy, rage, triumph? Fine.

But having noticed it, keep thinking. You may find clarity emerges once your emotions have been acknowledged.

So what do puzzles, poker and misinformation have in common?

Some puzzles – and some poker hands – require enormous intellectual resources to navigate, and the same is true of certain subtle statistical fallacies.

But much of the time we fool ourselves in simple ways and for simple reasons. Slow down, calm down, and the battle for truth is already half-won.

Source: Read Full Article