Decision Making
Decision-making is a complex process involving :
- Experience.
- Analysis of the situation.
- The time available.
Some decision-making behaviours can be dangerous:
- Anti-authoritarian: "Let me do it!
- Impulsive: the subject acts in haste and without reflection.
- The invulnerable: The person knows the possible risks and accidents, but it only happens to others.
- The macho: Wants to prove that he is the best and is willing to take risks to do so.
- The resigned: thinks that his or her destiny is unchangeable and leaves it to others.
Risk Assessment
There are two types of risk:
- External risk: objective, represents an objectively dangerous situation.
- Internal risk: subjective, the result of a subjective representation of a situation.
Decision Bias
- Conformity to a majority: the influence of others on our decision.
- Confirmation: the tendency to select elements that confirm our decisions rather than those that contradict them.
- Habit: decisions that are oriented towards unusual solutions.
- Selection: Preference directs the selection of facts.
- Risk assessment: Poor risk assessment.
Status:: #wiki/notes/mature
Plantations:: Psychology
References:: Le Manuel de Pilotage d'Avion