Ratings14
Average rating3.4
“Organizations all over the world see bias as a villain. They are right. They do not see Noise that way. They should. In many areas, the current level of Noise is far too high. It is imposing high costs and producing terrible unfairness. What we have catalogued here is the tip of the iceberg. Laws should do much more to reduce those costs and combat that unfairness.”
Cognitive psychology is a major field of interest to me. If you don't know Daniel Kahneman, he is an absolute titan in the psychology field, after having written Thinking Fast and Slow, a book that has been referenced across and influenced many different fields. This was his follow up book, along with two co-authors: Oliver Sibony and Cass Sunstein.
This book examines the phenomenon of Noise and how it affects our judgment. Sources of noise are essentially anything that can impact a person's judgment- lack of sleep, stomach pain, a breakup, or miniscule things you may not even be aware of like being nutrient deficiency. Noise can even be the simple fact that we may treat people who subtly remind us of a sibling in a manner that's different than we would otherwise. Noise impacts the way we make decisions, but it also causes us to be inconsistent in the way we make decisions. The book focuses a fair amount on judges, as they are commonly studied in cases like this, and judges will frequently hand out different sentences across time that are inconsistent with themselves and each other.
Noise also delves into the wisdom of crowds effect, where the aggregate judgment of a group is most likely to be nearly correct, but that individual judgments are usually more wrong. There's lots of little tidbits like this, and the science is far from settled.
The goal we should strive for in society is a reduction of noise. Police, lawyers, politicians, judges, doctors, and many more are all making judgment calls that are rife with noise and ideally, we should be finding ways to limit this.
This was hard to rate as a lot of the info was not new to me, but was presented in new ways. The book is not dense and does a really good job for people new to the subject!
8/10