A psychological approach to decision support systems

A psychological approach to decision support systems

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Article ID: iaor1997433
Country: United States
Volume: 42
Issue: 1
Start Page Number: 51
End Page Number: 64
Publication Date: Jan 1996
Journal: Management Science
Authors: ,
Keywords: computers, information, forecasting: applications, artificial intelligence: decision support, computers: information
Abstract:

Rapid advances in information technology have brought decision makers the mixed blessing of an increasingly vast amount of easily available data. Designers of decision support systems (DSS) have focused on incorporating the latest technology with little attention to whether these new systems are compatible with the psychology of decision makers. The present premise is that DSS should be designed to take advantage of the distinctive competencies of decision makers while using technology to compensate for their inherent weaknesses. In this study they apply this approach to a forecasting task. The authors find that to arrive at a forecast decision makers often search their experience for a situation similar to the one at hand and then make small adjustments to this previous situation. The theoretical model of the performance of this intuitively appealing strategy shows that it performs reasonably well in highly predictable environments, but performs quite poorly in less predictable environments. Results from an experiment confirm these predictions and show that providing decision makers with a simple lienar model in combination with a computerized database of historical cases improves performance significantly. The authors conclude by discussing how these results can be used to help improve forecasting in applied contexts, such as promotion forecasting in the retail grocery industry.

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