When it comes to making decisions — both big ("Should I refinance?") and small ("Where to go for dinner?") — I often have trouble (...I can hear those who know me chuckling at that understatement). But I'm not alone in this type of behavior, according to a new book.
Author Dylan Evans ("Risk Intelligence: How to Live with Uncertainty," Free Press, $26, April 2012, 288 pp.) has penned a carefully researched book that provides all the statistical evidence one might need to improve her risk intelligence.
"This book is about why so many of us are so bad at estimating probabilities and how we can become better at it," writes Evans.
Evans devised a test consisting of 50 statements, the responses to which produce an overall score which comprises your Risk Quotient. You can take a basic and quick RQ test for free Evans' website, www.projectionpoint.com. I got a "low" score of 49.28 out of 100 on this test, which puts me in good company: The vast majority of us have quite low risk intelligence, according to Evans.
So how can we change that?
In his book, Evans offers simple techniques we can use to boost our RQ. These include:
- Train yourself not to follow your natural inclination to estimate risks either by a vague "gut feeling" or verbally, such as describing them to yourself as "highly probable." Instead, always assign a specific percentage for the probability of an event.
- Make yourself consider a larger number of possibilities of outcomes for events that you are naturally inclined toward. We generally consider two or three, but should consider closer to five or six.
- Gain a better understanding of a simple set of truths about probability.
- Assess your "risk appetite" — your natural degree of willingess to take risks.
- To view the book trailer, visit www.youtube.com/evansd66
About the book (from the author's website:
Risk Intelligence is a traveler's guide to the twilight zone of probabilities and speculation. Evans shows us how risk intelligence is vital to making good decisions, from dealing with climate change to combating terrorism. He argues that we can all learn a lot from expert gamblers, not just about money, but about how to make decisions in all aspects of our lives.
I think this book will appeal to those who like STATISTICS. It's chock full of 'em. If you would like to "win" my new hardcover review copy of Dylan Evans's new novel "Risk Intelligence: How to Live with Uncertainty," courtesy of Free Press, an imprint of Simon & Schuster, simply comment on this post with your email address. If you're selected as winner (at random), I'll contact you to find out where to mail the book. If no one comments or otherwise claims the book it will be donated to the Pottstown Regional Public Library.
About the author:
There is a special kind of intelligence for
dealing with risk and uncertainty. It doesn't correlate with IQ, and
most psychologists failed to spot it because it is found in such a
disparate, rag-tag group of people — American weather-forecasters,
professional gamblers, and hedge-fund managers, for example.
This
book shows just how important risk intelligence is. Many people in positions which require high risk intelligence — doctors, financial
regulators and bankers, for instance — seem unable to navigate what
Evans calls the "darkened room," the domain of doubt and uncertainty.
Risk Intelligence is a traveler's guide to the twilight zone of probabilities and speculation. Evans shows us how risk intelligence is vital to making good decisions, from dealing with climate change to combating terrorism. He argues that we can all learn a lot from expert gamblers, not just about money, but about how to make decisions in all aspects of our lives.
Want to win it? |
I think this book will appeal to those who like STATISTICS. It's chock full of 'em. If you would like to "win" my new hardcover review copy of Dylan Evans's new novel "Risk Intelligence: How to Live with Uncertainty," courtesy of Free Press, an imprint of Simon & Schuster, simply comment on this post with your email address. If you're selected as winner (at random), I'll contact you to find out where to mail the book. If no one comments or otherwise claims the book it will be donated to the Pottstown Regional Public Library.
About the author:
DYLAN EVANS |