Actions

Difference between revisions of "Psychological elements in decision making"

From Deliberative Democracy Institiute Wiki

 
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
Deliberation seems to be influenced by a variety of psychological factors. In this section we will describe several of those psychological factors.
+
Deliberation seems to be influenced by a variety of psychological factors. In this section, we will describe several of those psychological factors.
  
 
=== conservatives and liberals===
 
=== conservatives and liberals===
It seems that conservatives are less in to delieration than liberals.. But when in deliberation conservative and liberal are also different in their views. This differentiation make negotiation between liberals and conservatives very hard. Acording to Hiedt conservative will seek for authority, while liberals will avoid athority. Conservative prefers obedience while libers will prefer omplex discussion.
+
It seems that conservatives are less into deliberation than liberals. But when in deliberation [[Conservatives and Liberals|conservative and liberals]] are also different in their views. This differentiation makes the negotiation between liberals and conservatives very hard. According to Heidt conservatives will seek authority, while liberals will avoid authority. Conservative prefers obedience while liberals will prefer complex discussion. This and other differences make deliberation between the parties challenging.
  
 
===Tendney toward and against deliberation===
 
===Tendney toward and against deliberation===
Research to date has largely explored how participation is associated with individual-level factors (e.g., demographic factors such as race and psychographic factors such as need for cognition)  (Goidel,  Freeman,  Procopio,  &  Zewe,  2008; Jacobs,  Cook,  &  Delli Carpini,  2009; Neblo,  Esterling,  Kennedy,  Lazer,  &  Sokhey,  2010). ([https://www.publicdeliberation.net/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1494&context=jpd source], page 4)
+
Research to date has largely explored how participation is associated with individual-level factors (e.g., demographic factors such as race and psychographic factors such as the need for cognition)  (Goidel,  Freeman,  Procopio,  &  Zewe,  2008; Jacobs,  Cook,  &  Delli Carpini,  2009; Neblo,  Esterling,  Kennedy,  Lazer,  &  Sokhey,  2010). ([https://www.publicdeliberation.net/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1494&context=jpd source], page 4)
  
 +
==Effects of perceptions of the environment on decision making==
 +
We humans are influenced by the perception of our surrounding. in situations which we perceive as dangerous, we will react with the [[FFFF]] system, while in situations that seems calm and safe we will react with [[PFC]].  Each of us perceives our surroundings differently. The more fearful will be more conservatives, while the more relaxed will be more liberal in the same situation.
 +
 +
===social motivation===
 +
[[Social motivation]]
 
[[category: Psychology‏‎]]
 
[[category: Psychology‏‎]]

Latest revision as of 22:16, 23 May 2022

Deliberation seems to be influenced by a variety of psychological factors. In this section, we will describe several of those psychological factors.

conservatives and liberals

It seems that conservatives are less into deliberation than liberals. But when in deliberation conservative and liberals are also different in their views. This differentiation makes the negotiation between liberals and conservatives very hard. According to Heidt conservatives will seek authority, while liberals will avoid authority. Conservative prefers obedience while liberals will prefer complex discussion. This and other differences make deliberation between the parties challenging.

Tendney toward and against deliberation

Research to date has largely explored how participation is associated with individual-level factors (e.g., demographic factors such as race and psychographic factors such as the need for cognition) (Goidel, Freeman, Procopio, & Zewe, 2008; Jacobs, Cook, & Delli Carpini, 2009; Neblo, Esterling, Kennedy, Lazer, & Sokhey, 2010). (source, page 4)

Effects of perceptions of the environment on decision making

We humans are influenced by the perception of our surrounding. in situations which we perceive as dangerous, we will react with the FFFF system, while in situations that seems calm and safe we will react with PFC. Each of us perceives our surroundings differently. The more fearful will be more conservatives, while the more relaxed will be more liberal in the same situation.

social motivation

Social motivation