Imagine that your stockbroker – or the friend who’s always giving you stock tips – called and told you he had come up with a new investment strategy. Price-to-earnings ratios, debt levels, management, competition, what the company makes, and how well it makes it, all those considerations go out the window. The new strategy is this: Invest in companies with names that are very easy to pronounce. This would probably not strike you as a great idea. But, if recent research is to be believed, it might just be brilliant. One of the hottest topics in psychology today is something called ‘cognitive fluency. Cognitive fluency is simply a measure of how easy it is to think about something, and it turns out that people prefer things that are easy to think about to those that are hard. On the face of it, it’s a rather intuitive idea. But psychologists are only beginning to uncover the surprising extent to which fluency guides our thinking, and in situations where we have no idea it is at work. Psychologists have determined, for example, that shares in companies with easy-to-pronounce names do indeed significantly outperform those with hard-to-pronounce names. Other studies […]
Monday, February 8th, 2010
Easy = True
Stephan: As a culture we have an increasing disinclination to think about hard things.
This reality about ourselves has some frightening consequences. Perhaps it explains how we can spend weeks, discussing endlessly Michael Jackson's death and funeral, but cannot spare the time to think about the fact that one out five children in the U.S. suffer hunger on a regular basis.
But there are some bright lights in this darkness, and increasingly they are manifestations of localism.
Here on Whidbey Island, where I live, a group of women in the community, in the absence of a decent Federal or State safety net, have banded together to prepare lunches each day for the children who come to school without breakfast, or the kids who live in the woods. That's right, bands of teenagers who live in the woods. I am increasingly persuaded that if we are to maintain a humane quality of life it will have to come from local initiatives. Every level above that has been bought and is controlled by corporate special interests
What is going on in your community?
Thanks to Rick Ingrasci, MD.