Biases in future-oriented Delphi studies: A cognitive perspective
Journal
Technological Forecasting and Social Change
ISSN
0040-1625
ISSN-Digital
1873-5509
Type
journal article
Date Issued
2016-04-01
Author(s)
Winkler, Jens
Abstract
Delphi is an established information gathering and forecasting approach that has proven to deliver valuable results in a wide variety of specialist fields. Yet, Delphi studies have also continuously been subject to critique and doubt, particularly concerning its judgmental and forecasting accuracy. To a large part this can be attributed to the substantial discretion researchers have in their design and implementation. Awkwardly designed Delphi studies may lead to severe cognitive biases that adversely affect the research results. This paper takes a cognitive perspective by investigating how different cognitive biases take effect within future-oriented Delphi studies and how their unfavorable impacts can be mitigated by thoroughly adapting specific Delphi design features. The analysis addresses cognitive biases affecting panelists' initial estimates — namely framing and anchoring as well as the desirability bias — as well as such cognitive biases taking effect during feedback and revision loops — namely the bandwagon effect and belief perseverance.
Language
English
HSG Classification
contribution to scientific community
Refereed
Yes
Publisher
Elsevier
Publisher place
Amsterdam
Volume
105
Start page
63
End page
76
Pages
14
Subject(s)
Division(s)
Eprints ID
247383