Society & Culture - Posted by Tim Green-U. Texas on Monday, April 5, 2010 15:36 - 5 Comments    
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TMI leads to desire for instant gratification

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The long-term benefits of specific decisions can be reinforced by tangible rewards, such as a good grade, or promotion, which can serve as markers of long-term success and help overcome short-term biases, says Bradley Love. “Basically, people have to stay away from thinking about the short-term pains and gains or they are sunk and, objectively, will end up worse off.” But “to fully appreciate a long-term option, you have to choose it repeatedly.” Credit: iStockphoto

U. TEXAS (US)—When faced with a choice that could yield either short-term satisfaction or longer-term benefits, people with complete information generally go for the quick reward.





“You’d think that with more information about your options, a person would make a better decision. Our study suggests the opposite,” says Bradley Love, associate professor at the University of Texas at Austin.

“To fully appreciate a long-term option, you have to choose it repeatedly and begin to feel the benefits.”

The findings, available online in the journal Judgment and Decision Making, could help better explain the decisions people make on everything from eating right and exercising to spending more on environmentally friendly products.

As part of the study, 78 subjects were repeatedly given two options through a computer program that allowed them to accumulate points. For each choice, one option offered the subject more points.

But choosing the other option could lead to more points further along in the experiment.

A small cash bonus was tied to the subjects’ performance, providing an incentive to rack up more points during the 250 trial questions.

However, subjects who were given full and accurate information about what they would have to give up in the short term to rack up points in the long term, chose the quick payoff more than twice as often as those who were given false information or no information about the rewards they would be giving up.

In a real-life scenario, a student who stayed home to study and then learned he had missed a fun party would be less likely to study the next time in a similar situation—even if that option provides more long-term benefits.

“Basically, people have to stay away from thinking about the short-term pains and gains or they are sunk and, objectively, will end up worse off,” Love says.

While psychologists have long studied how humans make choices, this is among the first research that examines how people measure “what could have been” when they make repeated decisions that affect their future state.

Love says he believes the long-term benefits of specific decisions can be reinforced by tangible rewards, such as a good grade, a raise or promotion, which can serve as markers of long-term success and help overcome short-term biases.

“If there were no conflict in our choices, this wouldn’t be a problem. But everything has that conflict between short-term and long-term goals,” Love says. “It’s really hard for a learning system to disentangle what’s good for you in the short term or long-term.”

University of Texas news: www.utexas.edu/news/

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5 Comments

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Gary Engstrand
Apr 6, 2010 12:18

What’s TMI?

Gayle
Apr 6, 2010 12:41

Gary– “TMI”= too much information

emc
Apr 6, 2010 12:43

Too Much Information, used more often as a point of modern etiquette, like, you’re sharing more than I want to know…

el christador
Apr 6, 2010 14:31

I like to interpret TMI as a reference to Three-Mile Island. It means “we’re in danger of a meltdown here,” a warning given to someone who is disclosing overly personal information that you’d rather not be hearing.

Christian
Apr 12, 2010 9:59

Now if only you could know the problems you may have from each decision. But i guess thats learning.

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