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Unconscious Thought Is An
Active, Goal-Directed Process
We're often told, "You should sleep on it" before
you make an important decision. Why is that? How does "sleeping
on it" help your decision-making process?
Conventional wisdom suggests that by "sleeping on it,"
we clear our minds and relieve ourselves of the immediacy (and
accompanying stress) of making a decision. Sleep also helps organize
our memories, process the information of the day, and solve problems.
Such wisdom also suggests that conscious deliberation (not ot
be confused with consciousness) helps decision making in general.
But new research (Dijksterhuis et al., 2009) suggests something
else might also be at work our unconscious.
Previous research suggests that sometimes the more consciously
we think about a decision, the worse the decision made. Sometimes
what's needed is a period of unconscious thought equivalent
to "sleeping on it" according to the researchers
in order to make better decisions. Here's how they study this
phenomenon:
"[... In a] typical experiment demonstrating this effect,
participants choose between a few objects (e.g., apartments),
each described by multiple aspects. The objects differ in desirability,
and after reading the descriptions, participants are asked to
make their choice following an additional period of conscious
thought or unconscious thought. In the original experiments, unconscious
thinkers made better decisions than conscious thinkers when the
decisions were complex."
The researchers suggest that unconscious thought, contrary to
the way many of us think about it, is an active, goal-directed
thought process. The primary difference is that in unconscious
thought, the usual biases that are a part of our conscious thinking
are absent. In unconscious thought, we weigh the importance of
the components that make up our decision more equally, leaving
our preconceptions at the door of consciousness.
So this is all fine and good, but how you do take laboratory
findings and adapt them to a real-world experience to show that
unconscious thinkers think better (e.g., with less distortions
or biases)? One way to do this is to look at sports, because our
weighting of different components is done beforehand and individually
not as an artificial variable manipulated by the researchers.
Each week over a period of 6 weeks, the researchers took 352
undergraduates from the University of Amsterdam and asked them
to predict the outcome of four different upcoming soccer matches.
Participants expertise about soccer was measured, and then they
were asked to predict the result of each of the four upcoming
soccer matches.
"[Then] participants were divided into three experimental
conditions. In the immediate condition, participants saw the four
matches on the computer screen and were asked to provide their
answers in 20 s[econds].
"In both the conscious-thought and the unconscious-thought
conditions, participants saw the four matches on the computer
screen for 20 s[econds] and were told they would have to predict
the outcomes later on.
"Conscious-thought participants were told they had an additional
2 min to think about the matches. Unconscious-thought participants
were told they would do something else for 2 min and performed
a two-back task designed to occupy conscious processing."
A second experiment was conducted on another group of undergraduates
to replicate the findings and understand more about the underlying
process.
What did they find?
"These experiments demonstrate that among experts, unconscious
thought leads to better predictions of soccer results than either
conscious thought or quick, immediate guesses.
"Experiment 2 sheds light on why this may be so: Unconscious
thinkers seem to be better at using the appropriate information
to arrive at their estimates. Unconscious thinkers who had more
accurate knowledge about the single best prediction criterion
(world ranking) made better predictions. This was not true for
conscious thinkers or for immediate decision makers."
Just to emphasize this finding if you're an expert and
you had extra time to think about your decision in the area of
your expertise (conscious thinker) or had to make a quick decision,
you made worse decisions than those who were unconscious thinkers.
The researcher hypothesize that conscious thought can lead to
poor weighting in decision-making the more you think about
something, the more your biases interfere with good decision-making.
Unconscious thinkers in this experiment appear to weight the
relative importance of diagnostic information more accurately
than conscious thinkers did.
As always, these results must be taken with a grain of salt.
The experiment was conducted only on undergraduates and may not
generalize to other age groups or people with different educational
backgrounds. Furthermore, other research has not found a significant
performance difference between unconscious thinkers and conscious
thinkers, and unconscious thought is not always the mode to rely
on when faced with a complex decision (e.g., you can't use this
for gambling and certain kinds of information).
But for certain kinds of decisions those that are complex
and where you have some expertise "sleeping on it"
may be more helpful than spending minutes or hours of conscious
thought on it. The brain makes good unconscious decisions, when
we let it.
Reference
Source 138
October 27, 2009
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