LSE Space for Thought lecture series
Date: Monday 20 October 2008
Time: 6.30-8pm
Venue: Sheikh Zayed Theatre, New Academic Building
Speaker: Dr Gerd Gigerenzer
Chair: Dr Sandra Jovchelovitch
We think of intelligence as a deliberate, conscious activity guided by the laws of logic. Yet much of our mental life is unconscious, based on processes alien to logic: gut feelings, or intuitions. In his lecture Dr Gigerenzer argues that intuition is more than impulse and caprice; it has its own rationale. This can be described by fast and frugal heuristics, which exploit evolved abilities in our brain. Heuristics ignore information and try to focus on the few important reasons. He shows that biased minds that intuitively rely of heuristics can make better inferences about the world than information-greedy statistical algorithms. More information, more time, even more thinking, are not always better, and less can be more.
Gerd Gigerenzer is the director of the Centre for Adaptive Behaviour and Cognition at the Max Planck Institute for Human Development in Berlin. He has won numerous prizes, including the 1991 AAAS Prize for Behavioural Science Research and the 2002 and 2007 German Science Book of the Year Prize. He has been the Professor of Psychology at the University of Chicago and the John M. Olin Distinguished visiting Professor at the School of Law, University of Virginia. His most recent book is Gut Feelings: Short Cuts to Better Decision Making (Allen Lane, August 2008).
Podcast and Slides
A podcast of this event is available to download from the LSE public lectures and events podcasts channel.
A copy of Dr Gigerenzer's PowerPoint is now available to download using the link below.
Download: Gut Feelings: short cuts to better decision making (pdf)