So am I right that this paper argues that stupid as
self-reporting of mental states may be, it is better than
conventional choice theory? They even talk about people's
"perception of their experience." Wow! Long live the homunculus!
One that always makes me laugh is whenever there is a
scandal about advertising of some kind, the journalists go
out into the streets and ask the punters if they are
influenced by advertising. Surprise, surprise, the result is
always 100% "no."
Interesting to read that there is currently an explosion of
these happiness surveys and their scientific credibility. I
thought Amartya Sen has done a pretty good job on this one.
Rather than using Sen's classic example of the Indian beggar
who sleeps on a wet concrete floor every night, but has just
laid some fresh straw, I decided to do a survey myself. My
partner was 3 years ago an attractive, gregarious, smoking,
drinking, eating butterfly who had never even had a headache
in 50 years. Then she had a stroke. She can't eat, let alone
smoke or drink, can hardly talk or walk, doesn't go out and
is in almost constant pain. I just asked her if she's happy.
Answer "yes." I don't deny that that tells me something. And
I was pleased to hear it, too. Answers to researchers'
questions are objective data. But it is nonsense to think
that these words reflect observations of a person's own
state of consciousness.
Oh, and I'm happy too.
Thanks for the paper David. I will study it with more
liesure shortly.
Andy
David Preiss wrote:
Dear Andy,
This paper by Daniel Kahneman and Alan Krueger addresses your
question, I think:
Developments in the Measurement
of Subjective Well-Being
Daniel Kahneman and Alan B. Krueger
Journal of Economic Perspectives—Volume 20, Number 1—Winter 2006 —
Pages 3–24
http://www.krueger.princeton.edu/PDF%20of%20Kahneman%20Krueger%20paper.pdf
According to these authors, self reported measures may be not that
bad, after all.
David
On Nov 10, 2009, at 11:44 PM, Andy Blunden wrote:
I heard another one of those silly reports on the radio just now.
Never mind what it was about, but it reported that x% of people
who did y are happy, whilst of who didn't, only z% are happy, and
the reporter went on to refer to it as an "established fact" that
x made people happy. This "established fact" was gained from
people filling out survey forms, "checking all the boxes" and
returning them in the mail.
It is over 100 years, isn't it, since mainstream, positivist
science (let alone real science) rejected self-reporting of mental
states as a legitimate way of doing psychology. How come it's
still going on? Is this taught at universities, or is it just
marketing firms moving in on the territory?
Andy
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Andy Blunden http://www.erythrospress.com/
Classics in Activity Theory: Hegel, Leontyev, Meshcheryakov,
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Andy Blunden http://www.erythrospress.com/
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