Hi,
I have a question concerning the èrceptio (misperception) of feedback.
In ""Misperceptions of basic dynamics: the case of renewable resource
management"" (SDR 20(2): 139-162), Erling Moxnes describes an experiment
that uses a simple model of lychen, where subjects had to manage a
reindeer population. He wrote that ""the stock and flow diagram is one
of the tools of system dynamics and has typically not been available to
decision makers thus far. Consequently, a structuring of the problem
by this tool has not been available either [to the subjects in the
experiment]. Therefore, the subjects get verbal descriptions. However,
the descriptions are sufficient to construct the model (...)."" (p. 141)
Is a textual description all one needs in order to construct a model with
a stock and flows and with a feedback loop? Or does one have to think in
terms of these concepts in order to ""see"" them in the description? What
is the ""tool"": the diagram or the concept (or both).
Along with the verbal description, the subjects were given the information
feedback provided by the simulation; however, subject's failed to build
adecuate mental models despite this informatin feedback (p. 150): this
""requires a language in which to represent dynamics systems and an ability
to translate available normal language informatino into the modelling
language.""
Does this failure to percieve the relevant structure in the situation
(from text and from the simulation) mean that ""we perceive what we
(already) know""? (And so the only way to overcome the limitation is
to study SD or a comparable ""language"" with stocks and feedback?) Or
is there a way to detect or ""discover"" the structure withour ptior
training?
In his Nobel lecture (MAPS OF BOUNDED RATIONALITY: A PERSPECTIVE ON
INTUITIVE JUDGMENT AND CHOICE; 12/8/2002), Daniel Kahneman mentions
that ""The core idea of prospect theory (Section 4) is that changes
and differences are much more accessible than absolute levels of
stimulation."" (p.

is that they are designed to enhance the accessibility of changes
and differences (Palmer, 1999). Perception is reference- dependent:
the perceived attributes of a focal stimulus reflect the contrast
between that stimulus and a context of prior and concurrent stimuli.""
(p. 11; Palmer, S. E. (1999). Vision science: Photons to phenomenology.
Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.)
In SD, what can be known at a given point in time are the levels in
the stocks. In (visual) perception it's change, closer to
rate_of_change than to stock (am I interpreting this right?).
So: is there a change that in an experiment with a simulator
that directs the subjects' attention towards CHANGES, they
performe better (build better mental models)?
I'd appreciate your comments,
Martin Schaffernicht
Universidad de Talca
Talca - Chile
Posted by Martin Schaffernicht <martin@utalca.cl>
posting date Mon, 09 Jan 2006 12:41:19 +0100