Looking at the latest science can help you make informed decisions, but it’s important to look at the broader context and assess the strength of the evidence when using science to inform decisions.
Fundamentally, how does anyone know us as individual leaders and/or judge our leadership effectiveness? The first thing that might come to mind is your personality. Secondly, how you communicate: how ...
Most of the decisions we make are inconsequential. But for those important ones, we need a strategy. On average, you make 700 decisions daily, most of them of little importance. But some decisions are ...
Decision-making inherently involves cause–effect relationships that introduce causal challenges. We argue that reliable algorithms for decision-making need to build upon causal reasoning. Addressing ...
In natural sciences such as physics, core concepts such as mass or energy are clearly defined and applied with precision by researchers. By contrast, two foundational concepts in the behavioural and ...
Decisions take time. Choosing a new apartment or deciding whether to change jobs are problems with many dimensions that need to be carefully balanced. There are methods to make better decisions, and ...
Is the latest iPhone a good value? Should you accept that promotion you’ve been offered? Should you pay to have someone come and fix your leaky toilet or fix it yourself? Although we might delude ...
The decision to buy or renovate a home, is for most people the most important financial decision in their life. Not only are the involved amounts 10 to 100 times higher than most other financial ...