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COMPLEX PROBLEMS CLASS 3

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... using rules of thumb, to find solutions or answers (New World Dictionary, 2nd Ed. ... Stories of Intuition and Choice from the Changing World of Medicine (2001) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: COMPLEX PROBLEMS CLASS 3


1
COMPLEX PROBLEMSCLASS 3
  • Heuristics to the Rescue
  • Alternatives to Purely Analytical
  • Problem-Solving Methods

2
Heuristics as a Problem
  • Cognitive Biases -- Implicit Heuristics
  • Most of the early work on heuristics focused on
    showing poorly understood use of heuristics when
    thinking/using analytical methods (Kahneman
    Tversky) --
  • Strong Priors
  • Unwarranted Analogies
  • Representative Bias
  • Myopia
  • Control ...

3
Heuristics as a Problem-Solving Tool
  • Heuristic
  • helping to discover or learn a method of
    education learning or computer programming in
    which the pupil or machine proceeds along
    empirical lines, using rules of thumb, to find
    solutions or answers (New World Dictionary, 2nd
    Ed.)
  • In this broad positive sense, heuristics are
    problem- solving methods using mental shortcuts,
    trial error, ...
  • Rules of Thumb
  • Empirical Searches exploratory experiments
    (Trial Error)
  • Intuition experience

4
Non-analytic Based Disciplines
  • Does not imply lack of intelligent thought or
    complete absence of analytical methods, just not
    the core of problem solving
  • Significant Heuristic Content or Method
  • Biomedicine
  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Computer Science, Engineering, Stats, Math ...

5
Contrasting Analytical Heuristic Methods
  • Math Example
  • Find point where y 2x2 - 10x reaches a
    minimum
  • Analytical Find derivative, set equal to zero
    and solve for x
  • (dy/dx 2x - 10) (0 2x - 10) (x 5)
  • Heuristic Numerical Search (trial error)
    plug-in values for x until you find the minimum
    point
  • in case above, analytical approach more
    efficient
  • if equation not easily solved with analytics,
    numerical search more efficient or may be only
    possible

6
Heuristics in Analytics
  • Prior Class Analytical Toolkit
  • Analogy
  • Solving in parts
  • Backward-Forward
  • Transforming into known problem
  • Generalizing from specific solution
  • Although now integral part of analytical
    problem-solving techniques, these are really
    rules of thumb (heuristics) that people tried
    over time they became widely known because they
    worked

7
Experimental Evidence on Heuristics
  • Bargaining Ultimatum Game
  • Fixed sum to split between Player A Player B
    A makes offer, if B rejects, game ends-no deal
    if B accepts, deal made
  • Analytics A offer minimum, B accept
  • Experiments
  • Few offers below 7525 split, if made, rejected
  • Reasons fear rejection, fairness so use
    heuristics (intuition )
  • Extensions time limits,multiple rounds,
  • people who quickly agreed on 5050 did the best
  • people who tried for very uneven results or
    bickered over small differences did the worst
  • Bottom Line?
  • Where norms are involved that are not easily
    model in analytics, using intuition can improve
    on pure analytics

8
Experimental Economics Evidence on Heuristics
  • Focal Points -- rule of thumb (heuristic)
    solutions to difficult strategic decisions
  • Divide the cities (location game) Harvard
    Stanford MBA student pairs separately choose from
    list of cities with certain limitations score
    bigger when less overlap
  • Results?
  • Geographic (East-West) focal points
  • Where to Meet in NYC?
  • Thomas Schelling experiments found GST focal
    point
  • Bottom Line?
  • Intuition can be a useful heuristic

9
Biomedical Examples
  • Rules of Thumb Intuition
  • Patient presents with sore throat upper
    respiratory symptoms
  • common cold virus
  • Infant presents with intestinal discomfort
  • gas
  • Patient presents with shortness of breath and
    fatigue
  • asthma
  • Search
  • Patient presents with fever severe sore throat,
    fatigue -- no other
  • Rapid Strep Test
  • Symptoms recur frequently -- overnight strep
    culture
  • Lack of resolution -- blood tests (C-reactive
    protein white blood cells )
  • Start from low cost/most common and proceed

10
Example from Everyday Decisions
  • Heuristics that you employ or have seen others
    employ in everyday personal decisions
  • Rules of Thumb?
  • Searches?
  • Take 15 minutes and write down list of heuristics
    from both personal and business experiences
    rank by the ones that work well and not so well
    indicate why
  • In general, these kinds of examples from are
    often called Satisficing

11
Limits of Intuition
  • Fooled by Randomness (Taleb, 2002) Experiments
    show that people using simple observation
    (heuristic), repeatedly see patterns to outcomes
    where none exist

12
Robert Lucas on Limits of Simple Searches
Observations
  • Since the mid 1980s, companies like Microsoft,
    FedEx, Staples, MCI and many others have shown
    tremendous growth in earnings, market share,
    employment and other performance measures. With
    such a range of experience, why do we need
    theoretical models? Why cant a company just send
    a fact-finding team to Staples, find out the
    strategies and structures which made them
    successful, and then go home and get their own
    company to do the same? This sounds easy enough,
    but it is not really operational ... Firms are
    just too complex -- there are too many things
    going on at once -- for getting all the facts to
    be either possible or useful. Faced with so much
    data, an observer who is unequipped with a theory
    sees what he wants to see, or what the successful
    company or management guru wants to show him.
    One needs some principles for deciding which
    facts are central and which are peripheral. This
    is exactly the purpose of to isolate some very
    limited aspects of a situation and focus on them
    to the exclusion of all others ... We need to
    make some hard choices about what to emphasize
    and what to leave out before we can think in an
    organized way at all.How do economies or
    companies succeed?
  • Adapted from Robert Lucas, 1994 Nobel Prize
    Winner to European Econometrics Society
    (Extension of science philosopher, Karl Popper)

13
Limits of Heuristics Examples
  • Biomedical
  • Jerome Groopman -- Harvard Hematologist-Oncologist
    Second Opinions Stories of Intuition and Choice
    from the Changing World of Medicine (2001)
  • Pediatricians rule of thumb gt Infant has gas
  • Reality gt Obstructed Bowel
  • Primary Physician rule of thumb gt Woman has
    asthma
  • Reality gt Leukemia
  • Production
  • Carnegie-Mellon Bicycle Production Example

14
General Lessons about Using Heursitics
  • Heuristics Most Successful Where
  • Outcomes conform to typical situations
  • Heuristics fail where nuances present
  • Causal relationships simple (e.g. virus-disease)
  • Heuristic approach in biomedicine not as
    successful in multi-factor problems, e.g.
    Neurological problems
  • Problem of a nature so that computational power
    can overwhelm the search problem by brute force,
  • e.g. Human Genome project finding a numerical
    solution through searches
  • Problem is time-sensitive
  • Problem beyond analytical limits

15
The Tradeoffs analytics v. heuristics
  • Analytics -- High Cost/Low Error
  • Precise, Logical,
  • Costly in terms of time/mental demands
    flexibility
  • Heuristics -- Low Cost/High Error
  • Low cost in terms of time/mental demands,
    flexibility
  • Difficult to assess Subject to unclear biases
  • CS Heuristics are bug ridden by definition. If
    they werent, they would be algorithms

16
Analytical Heuristics an oxymoron?
  • Methods different but the same?
  • rules of thumb intuitive searches sometimes
    imitate analytical results (Day, AER)
  • Analytical Heuristics
  • Not all search random are led by intuition alone
  • Search can be guided by analytics prior
    knowledge
  • Wright Brothers entrepreneurship

17
Development of Flight Bradshaw Lienert (1991)
18
WRIGHT BROTHERS ENTREPRENUERSHIP
  • One meaning of entrepreneurship innovating and
    improving through combining or mutating products,
    processes
  • Wright Brothers (See Related Websites First
    Flight)
  • Did not just go through trial error or use just
    intuition
  • Serious research on past efforts
  • Analytical reasoning regarding physics
  • Then Search through Experimentation in wind
    tunnels and full-scale

19
Critical Lessons
  • Effective use of heuristics will make you a
    better manager
  • Overuse of heuristics will create mistakes --
    sometimes devastating mistakes
  • Employ heuristics when best suited to the
    situation -- not as a crutch to alleviate the
    need to think analytically
  • What is the decision environment
  • Time sensitivity, analytical tractability and
    completeness, search power, analytics guiding
    heuristics possible
  • Remember the implicit biases apply to heuristics
    too!

20
Mini-Assignment
  • Identify and be able to explain 2 examples of the
    use of heuristics to solve problems in a
    workplace setting involving rules of thumb,
    simple search, or the overlap of analytics
    heuristics. Evaluate how well the heuristic
    seems to work and the reasons it does or does not
    seem to work very well.
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