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More Causes Less Effect: Destructive Interference in Decision Making.

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posted on 2022-07-08, 14:35 authored by Irina Basieva, Vijitashwa Pandey, Polina Khrennikova
We present a new experiment demonstrating destructive interference in customers' estimates of conditional probabilities of product failure. We take the perspective of a manufacturer of consumer products and consider two situations of cause and effect. Whereas, individually, the effect of the causes is similar, it is observed that when combined, the two causes produce the opposite effect. Such negative interference of two or more product features may be exploited for better modeling of the cognitive processes taking place in customers' minds. Doing so can enhance the likelihood that a manufacturer will be able to design a better product, or a feature within it. Quantum probability has been used to explain some commonly observed "non-classical" effects, such as the disjunction effect, question order effect, violation of the sure-thing principle, and the Machina and Ellsberg paradoxes. In this work, we present results from a survey on the impact of multiple observed symptoms on the drivability of a vehicle. The symptoms are assumed to be conditionally independent. We demonstrate that the response statistics cannot be directly explained using classical probability, but quantum formulation easily models it, as it allows for both positive and negative "interference" between events. Since quantum formalism also accounts for classical probability's predictions, it serves as a richer paradigm for modeling decision making behavior in engineering design and behavioral economics.

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Citation

Basieva, I.; Pandey, V.; Khrennikova, P. More Causes Less Effect: Destructive Interference in Decision Making. Entropy 2022, 24, 725. https://doi.org/10.3390/e24050725

Author affiliation

School of Business

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Entropy

Volume

24

Issue

5

Pagination

725

Publisher

MDPI AG

issn

1099-4300

eissn

1099-4300

Acceptance date

2022-05-17

Copyright date

2022

Available date

2022-07-08

Spatial coverage

Switzerland

Language

eng

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