We like the idea that our politicians are doing things for evidence-based reasons. But it turns out we’re less comfortable with people trying to collect that evidence.
That’s according to a new study by Chris Chabris and colleagues, entitled “Objecting to experiments that compare two unobjectionable policies or treatments”. It’s a clever study – and, importantly, a large, preregistered one, which asked the same question 16 times in three different populations and found compatible answers, so it’s probably not garbage. What it did was look at how people feel about randomised experiments between unobjectionable policies or treatments.
That sounds a bit dry; here’s what it means. Imagine, for instance, a doctor’s surgery is trying to reduce deadly infections by providing doctors with a checklist of standard precautions to take before each procedure. The participants were asked how they felt if the checklist were displayed on the doctor’s badge, or on a poster on the wall. And they also asked them how they would feel if, instead, one room had the poster, and the other had the badge, and patients were randomly assigned to one or the other to test which worked best.
They asked the question four times of different groups, and on the whole, people were comfortable with either of the two options. People preferred the poster, but the percentage objecting to either poster or badge was never more than 25% and usually more like 15-20%.
But when they were asked about randomly assigning patients to one or the other – “A/B tests” – then the percentage objecting leapt up, to 30% in one test and 40-50% in the other three. They found similar results if the question was about a doctor choosing between one of two FDA-approved blood pressure drugs or randomly assigning patients to one or another, and then on other questions involving autonomous vehicle control systems, genetic testing, online dating and several more.
Even when people don’t mind option A, and they don’t mind option B, they really do mind you randomly assigning people to one or other of the two. The effect was just as strong among people with science degrees and professionals in the relevant field.
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