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Subjectivity in Decision Analysis

This article explores the dominance of rational choice theory in business decision making, comparing it with image theory and discussing the role of utilitarian and Kantian ethics. It also examines the problems with an objective approach and presents empirical evidence contrary to rational choice models.

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Subjectivity in Decision Analysis

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  1. Subjectivity in Decision Analysis David L. Olson James & H.K. Stuart Professor in MIS University of Nebraska Lincoln Human Centered Processes - 2008

  2. Rational Choice TheoryK. Morrell, Journal of Business Ethics [2004] • Dominant model for business decision making • Compared with Image Theory • Utilitarian ethics • both consistent • Kantian ethics • Image theory yes, RCT no • Virtue-based ethics • Image theory yes, RCT no Human Centered Processes - 2008

  3. Ideal • Objective measures Max Weber • Accurate preference input • “Rational” decision maker Accounting: Jensen - Agency Theory Economics: Williamson - Transaction Cost Analysis Human Centered Processes - 2008

  4. Basic Preference Model Can use multiplicative model for interactions Human Centered Processes - 2008

  5. Objective Measures • Objective preferred • can measure • past profit, after tax • Subjective • know conceptually, but can’t accurately measure • response to advertising Human Centered Processes - 2008

  6. Problems with Objective Approach von Neumann & Morgenstern [1944] Theory of Games– utility is measurable Georgescu-Roegen [1954] The Quarterly Journal of Economics – requires to many assumptions of rationality Lindblom [1965] Public Administration Review– muddling through Morgenstern [1972] Journal of Economic Literature – 13 critical points • uncertainty • ambiguity • disagreement in groups Human Centered Processes - 2008

  7. EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE contrary to rational choice models Braybrooke & Lindblom [1969]; Simon [1985] Payne, et al. [1993] • Some problems never reach decision maker • decision makers often have simple maps of real problems • all alternatives not known, so decision makers do not have full, relevant information • individual altruism Tversky [1969] • systematic & predictable economic intransitivities Kahneman, Slovic & Tversky [1982] • people use heuristics rather than follow rational model Human Centered Processes - 2008

  8. James G. March Bell Journal of Economics [1978] • Rational choice involves guesses: • About future consequences of current actions • About future preferences of those consequences Administrative Science Quarterly [1996] • Alternatives & their consequences aren’t given, but need to be discovered & estimated • Bases of action aren’t reality, but perceptions of reality • Supplemental exchange theories emphasize the role of institutions in defining terms of rationality Human Centered Processes - 2008

  9. Overview • Inputs to preference models involve subjectivity • Weights are function of individual • Scores also valued from perspective of individual • Subjective assessment MAY be more accurate • Purpose of analysis should be to design better alternatives Human Centered Processes - 2008

  10. Means to Cope Payne, Bettman & Johnson [1993] • strategy will differ by number of alternatives • few - focus on all relevant information • many - noncompensatory simplifying heuristics • $/lives tradeoff varies by context • Hogarth: many find explicit tradeoffs uncomfortable • PROSPECT THEORY: initial analysis simple, weed out; for selected alternatives, more detailed • As people learn more about problem structure, construct choice strategies Human Centered Processes - 2008

  11. Objective/Subjective • OBJECTIVE: what is convenient to model • ideal - eliminate bias, arbitrary judgment • extreme: cost/benefit analysis spanning years of measuring the unmeasurable • SUBJECTIVE: what people do to cope • value is subjective after all anyway • value is what MAUT, MCDA seeks to measure Human Centered Processes - 2008

  12. ACCURATE PREFERENCE INPUT • incomplete information • uncertain measures • uncertain preferences • group participation • risk • time pressure: Edwards - how can you calculate expected utility in available time? • change competition complexity Human Centered Processes - 2008

  13. RELATIONSHIP TO MCDA • We shouldn’t expect so much theoretical purity • the world has shifted away from appreciation of numerical analysis • Just because assumptions are not met doesn’t mean pure approach better Human Centered Processes - 2008

  14. MCDA Methods • Multiattribute utility theory • Analytic hierarchy process • Outranking • ELECTRE, PROMETHEE • Fuzzy, DEA, Verbal Decision Analysis • Image Theory Human Centered Processes - 2008

  15. Spectrum MAUT with strictly objective measures MAUT with constructed measures Likert scales SMART - swing weighting rather than lottery tradeoffs AHP - ratios of subjective scale Human Centered Processes - 2008

  16. PROMETHEE Spectrum Class I: ordinal Class II: step advantage Class III: proportional advantage (in range) Class IV: three step Class V: proportional with indifference range Class VI: normal distribution Human Centered Processes - 2008

  17. MAUT Hierarchy Overall Cost $billions Lives lost Expected value Risk Probability of major catastrophe Civic improvement Families with upgraded housing Human Centered Processes - 2008

  18. Objective Measures Human Centered Processes - 2008

  19. Swing Weighting Human Centered Processes - 2008

  20. SMART with swing weighting Human Centered Processes - 2008

  21. Logical Decision • Hierarchy of criteria • Single-attribute Utility Functions • Worst imaginable utility = 0 • Best imaginable utility = 1 • Assess 0.5 level of either value or utility • Tradeoffs • Pairwise comparisons • Select preferred extreme • Improve other until equal Human Centered Processes - 2008

  22. SUF for Lives LostPROBLEM: sensitive to limits set – may warp values more than intended Human Centered Processes - 2008

  23. Weight TradeoffsPROBLEM: weights reflect both choices, scale – again hard to control • Cost <Lives Lost [0,1000]>[500,0] [0,1000]=[5,1000] • Cost <Risk [0,1]>[500,0] [0,0.35]=[500,0] • Cost > Civic Improvement [0,100000]>[500,0] [0,100000]=[350,0] • Weights (including scale): • Risk 5.029 • Cost 1.577 • Lives Lost 29.337 • Civic Improvement 64.058

  24. Tradeoff: Cost vs. Civic Improvement Human Centered Processes - 2008

  25. Result Human Centered Processes - 2008

  26. Contributions by Criteria Human Centered Processes - 2008

  27. Rock Springs vs. Newark Human Centered Processes - 2008

  28. Subjective Ratings Human Centered Processes - 2008

  29. Subjective SMART Human Centered Processes - 2008

  30. Output Comparisons Human Centered Processes - 2008

  31. Comparison with SMART • Simpler allows decision maker to see exactly what ratings are • MAUT • Distrusts human – masks tradeoffs in effort to make “objective” • “Objective” here means have no idea • Theoretically, preferences will be identical • Does allow for nonlinear interaction, but severe impact • My contention: • DIRECT IS BETTER THAN MACHINE Human Centered Processes - 2008

  32. Image Theory Human Centered Processes - 2008

  33. Image Theory process • Frame decision • Desired states • Actions needed to attain desired states • MORE CRITERIA • Helpful to MCDA in structuring • Context • Elicit participation of as many views as possible • Identify alternatives • Design an ideal rather than settle for existing • MORE ALTERNATIVES Human Centered Processes - 2008

  34. Verbal Decision Analysis • Controlled pairwise comparisons of tradeoffs • Focus on critical criteria • Don’t use falsely precise measures • Fuzzify – categorical ratings • Screen alternatives • Preemptive • Focus on critical tradeoffs Human Centered Processes - 2008

  35. VDA Process • Eliminate very high lives lost • Newark eliminated • Eliminated risk high or worse • Nome eliminated • Rock Springs now dominates Duquesne • FOCUS ON • Rock Springs • Gary • TRADEOFFS • Rock Springs– a little lower cost, improved lives lost • Gary – civic improvement slightly better Human Centered Processes - 2008

  36. Inferences • Objective can’t capture all the complexity of real decisions • OBJECTIVES ARE ALWAYS LEFT OUT • Conventional wisdom – at most 7 matter • BUT THERE IS NO PARETO OPTIMAL unless all considered • When Groups are involved, THERE IS NO ONE BEST DECISION • Ward Edwards – never saw a group pick an option that was first choice of one subgroup • NEGOTIATION Human Centered Processes - 2008

  37. Conclusion • Measures of alternative future performance, preference for that performance both subjective • Objective measures not always better • Focus should be on: • Learning (changing preference) • Design of better alternatives (Image Theory)

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