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Conflict Zen

conflict resolution for organizations, teams, executives and managers

Don't Miss the Gorilla

25 May 2005 by Tammy Lenski

We don’t always see what is right before our eyes, though we tend to think we do.

A few years ago a group of Harvard psychologists conducted a study to explore the ways our agendas influence what we actually see. They had research subjects view a videotape of six people basketball players passing the ball and asked them to count the number of passes made by one of the teams. In one video of the basketball game, a tall woman with an open umbrella walked through the center of the action, clearly visible for about five seconds. In a second video, a shorter woman in a gorilla costume walked through the action, also for about five seconds.

Participants in the study were asked if they’d seen anything odd. Thirty-five percent of the observers didn’t notice the woman at all. Even more surprising, fifty-six percent of the observers didn’t notice the gorilla. How do you miss a gorilla walking through the middle of a basketball game?

Essentially, a sizable portion of these research subjects saw only what they were asked to see, the number of passes being made. But a control group of people were asked to watch the video without any particular instruction and they readily noticed the odd visitors walking through the action. So, those assigned the task of counting missed information that was extraneous to that task-their brains filtered it out. Those with no assignment to look for something specific, and thus more open to what might cross the screen, didn’t miss the gorilla. In addition to "selective looking," other researchers have also identified similar "inattentional deafness."

While conflict resolution wasn’t the purpose of the research, and so we want to be careful about extrapolating beyond the researchers’ intent, it seems to me it’s not a difficult leap to see the application to navigating conflict more effectively.

When in conflict with someone, we are often predisposed to thinking or feeling about them in a certain way, based on past experience: She’s so passive-aggressive. He’s manipulative. She lies. He’s too controlling. When we do this, we’re essentially counting passes-we’re filtering out information that challenges our beliefs about the other person and instead we’re looking for, albeit unconsciously, information that supports our conclusions. It’s a trap for us to do this, because we miss information about and from them that might unlock the conflict. And as we become more and more certain that what we see is "the truth," that kind of judgmental certainty sets up the other person to have to defend themselves. So, we get locked in a cycle of blame and defend that sidetracks us from the real issues.

Broadening our attention, bringing an attitude of openness and curiosity is a much more effective strategy-though admittedly difficult to pull off if we’ve got a long history with the other person, department, organization, etc. Next time you find yourself in a difficult conversation or negotiation, try asking yourself, "How can I try to stay open to new data about this person or situation? What do I need to do to make that possible?"

This article was originally published in my regular column for The Monadnock Ledger.

Filed Under: Organizational conflict management

Good Negotiators Know Anchoring

1 May 2005 by Tammy Lenski

When I’m mediating a dispute involving money, I notice how frequently parties want the other side to make the first offer. It’s clear that many people consider it a disadvantage to go first. If you know anything about the concept of anchoring, though, you also know that making the first offer can actually put you in a very powerful position.

Psychologists Daniel Kahneman (also the winner of the 2002 Nobel Prize in economics) and Amos Tversky have researched the kinds of mental shortcuts, called heuristics, which people take when making a decision involving uncertainty. They’ve found that we tend to make decisions using some kind of reference point (anchor) and that we adjust our own number higher or lower according to that reference point.

And here’s the rub: Even if the reference point we use isn’t associated with the decision itself, it can influence us heavily. In a 1974 study, Kahneman and Tversky spun a "wheel of fortune" type wheel labeled with numbers 1-100. They then asked participants to guess the number of African countries in the United Nations. The number showing up on the wheel – a random number, mind you – influenced participants’ answers. For example, when the number on the wheel was 10, the median estimated percentage was 25 African countries in the U.N. When the number on the wheel was 65, the estimate was 45.

These results have been duplicated again and again in subsequent studies. Cornell MBA students were asked to name the year that Attila the Hun was defeated (AD 451). But before answering, they were asked to add 400 to the last three digits of their telephone number. When the resulting sum was between 400 and 599, the students’ average guess was that Attila the Hun was defeated in AD 629. When the number was between 1200 and 1399, the average guess was AD 988. Wow!

The influence of anchors has been investigated in research on consumers’ buying decisions (just think about the car dealer’s price sticker on the next car you buy), gambling decisions, opinions on the fair market value of a piece of real estate, and even judges’ perceptions of whether or not someone is lying.

Filed Under: Organizational conflict management
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Conflict Zen ® is about the simple yet powerful habits of mind and word that radically shift problems and turn conflict into opportunity. Dr. Tammy Lenski, a conflict management consultant for 15 years, shares what really works for organizational, management, business and executive conflict resolution.

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