Department of Cognitive, Perceptual, and Brain Sciences, University College London, London WC1H 0AP, United Kingdom.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2009 Dec 29;106(52):22151-6. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0908980106. Epub 2009 Dec 15.
How we react to humanitarian crises, epidemics, and other tragic events involving the loss of human lives depends largely on the extent to which we are moved by the size of their associated death tolls. Many studies have demonstrated that people generally exhibit a diminishing sensitivity to the number of human fatalities and, equivalently, a preference for risky (vs. sure) alternatives in decisions under risk involving human losses. However, the reason for this tendency remains unknown. Here we show that the distributions of event-related death tolls that people observe govern their evaluations of, and risk preferences concerning, human fatalities. In particular, we show that our diminishing sensitivity to human fatalities follows from the fact that these death tolls are approximately power-law distributed. We further show that, by manipulating the distribution of mortality-related events that people observe, we can alter their risk preferences in decisions involving fatalities. Finally, we show that the tendency to be risk-seeking in mortality-related decisions is lower in countries in which high-mortality events are more frequently observed. Our results support a model of magnitude evaluation based on memory sampling and relative judgment. This model departs from the utility-based approaches typically encountered in psychology and economics in that it does not rely on stable, underlying value representations to explain valuation and choice, or on choice behavior to derive value functions. Instead, preferences concerning human fatalities emerge spontaneously from the distributions of sampled events and the relative nature of the evaluation process.
我们对人道主义危机、流行病和其他涉及人员伤亡的悲惨事件的反应在很大程度上取决于我们对其相关死亡人数的感受程度。许多研究表明,人们通常对人员死亡人数的敏感性会逐渐降低,并且在涉及人员伤亡的风险决策中,他们更喜欢冒险(相对于确定)的选择。然而,这种趋势的原因尚不清楚。在这里,我们表明人们观察到的与事件相关的死亡人数分布决定了他们对人员伤亡的评估和风险偏好。具体来说,我们表明,我们对人员伤亡的敏感性降低是因为这些死亡人数大致呈幂律分布。我们进一步表明,通过操纵人们观察到的与死亡率相关的事件的分布,我们可以改变他们在涉及人员伤亡的决策中的风险偏好。最后,我们表明,在死亡率相关决策中冒险的倾向在经常观察到高死亡率事件的国家较低。我们的研究结果支持基于记忆采样和相对判断的数量评估模型。与心理学和经济学中常见的基于效用的方法不同,该模型不依赖于稳定的、潜在的价值表示来解释估值和选择,也不依赖于选择行为来推导出价值函数。相反,对人员伤亡的偏好是从采样事件的分布和评估过程的相对性质中自发产生的。