© Ralph
Orlowski / Reuters
|
A fresh study has
confirmed that people are reluctant to change their minds and adapt their
views, even when new information has been presented. This holds true even if
they stand to lose money. The research from the University of Iowa is based on previous
studies indicating that people are particularly likely to stick to their
original viewpoint when they’ve had to write their beliefs down — a phenomenon
known as the ‘explanation effect’, which also affects future actions.
RT report continues:
In
the study, Tom Gruca, a professor of marketing at the Tippie College of
Business, tried to find evidence of something called ‘confirmation bias’ — the
tendency to give preference to existing information or beliefs, rather than
considering alternative possibilities. He says equity analysts working on
financial markets are particularly prone to this bias, with those who issue
written forecasts being especially vulnerable to falling into the trap, despite
having access to new data to influence them.
Gruca
believes the findings are particularly relevant to market research, and that
they may be used to better predict trader behavior in future.
The
study took place over a 10-year period, between 1998 and 2008, and focused on
the Iowa Electronic Markets, an online futures market at the college, where
payoffs are contingent upon real life events. In that time frame, Gruca had the
students analyze the movie market. The students had to predict four-week
opening box office totals for 18 movies, while also buying and selling
contracts with real money.
It
was discovered that, despite the initial box office figures giving a good
indication of potential success, the student traders ignored the stocks and
stuck to their original predictions. As a result, nobody was buying or selling —
confirmation bias prevented the prices from becoming unstable.
In
order to test for the presence of the bias, Gruca had the student traders
explain why they had made the predictions they did prior to the beginning of
trading. According to his results, it was this process of explaining — or the
‘explanation effect’ — that solidified the students’ beliefs and prevented
their trading behavior from changing.
To
keep from making erroneous conclusions, Gruca used a ‘control group’ in his
research – in this case a separate group of people trading in markets, who
weren’t asked to explain the logic behind their forecasts. With the explanation
effect missing, it was found the respondents adjusted their opinions according
to the new information presented much more readily.
Consequently,
the stock prices changed much more fluidly than with the first group.
According
to Gruca, “This study shows that when all traders in a market have the same
bias — in this case, confirmation bias — market prices are not efficient and do
not reflect all of the information available.
“However,
if some traders are not biased, then market prices efficiently reflect new,
relevant information,” Gruca writes.
The study, co-authored by
Michael Cipriano, associate professor of accounting at the University of South
Carolina Upstate, and former Tippie MBA graduate, was published in The Journal
of Prediction Markets.
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