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Can a Single Cue Reduce Bias?

Balbir Singh1, Jordan R Axt2, Joshua Correll3

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Personality & Social Psychology Bulletin
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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Simplifying information by reducing decision cues boosts accuracy but doesn't eliminate bias. Even with fewer, clearer cues, decision-making may still exhibit social favoritism.

Keywords:
BiasDiscriminationJudgment Bias TaskSocial judgment

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Area of Science:

  • Decision Science
  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Behavioral Economics

Background:

  • Companies often simplify information to improve human decision-making and reduce bias.
  • Existing research indicates that multiple cues can lead to biased decisions as individuals selectively weigh information.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate whether reducing the number and ambiguity of decision-relevant cues decreases bias in selection decisions.
  • To determine if increased accuracy, resulting from simplified information, correlates with reduced decision bias.

Main Methods:

  • Three studies were conducted where participants made selection decisions.
  • The number and ambiguity of qualifications (decision cues) were manipulated across studies.
  • Accuracy and bias (social favoritism) were measured in response to information simplification.

Main Results:

  • Reducing the number of qualifications from multiple to a single cue increased decision accuracy.
  • However, this increase in accuracy did not significantly reduce decision bias or social favoritism.
  • Modifying the format or reducing the ambiguity of a single cue also improved accuracy without significantly reducing bias.

Conclusions:

  • Simplifying information by decreasing the number of cues enhances decision accuracy.
  • Reducing cue quantity or ambiguity does not inherently reduce decision bias, including social favoritism.
  • Further research is needed to understand how to effectively mitigate bias in simplified decision environments.