Effects of many conflicting objectives on decision-makers’ cognitive burden and decision consistency

J. Matias Kivikangas, Eeva Vilkkumaa, Julian Blank, Ville Harjunen, Pekka Malo, Kalyanmoy Deb, Niklas J. Ravaja, Jyrki Wallenius

Forskningsoutput: TidskriftsbidragArtikelVetenskapligPeer review

Sammanfattning

Practical planning and decision-making problems are often better and more accurately formulated with multiple conflicting objectives rather than a single objective. This study investigates a situation relevant for Multiple Criteria Decision Making (MCDM) as well as Evolutionary Multi-objective Optimization (EMO), where the decision-maker needs to make a series of choices between nondominated options characterized by multiple objectives. The cognitive capacity of humans is limited, which leads to cognitive burden that influences human decision-makers’ decisions. We measure how the varying number of objectives influences cognitive burden in a laboratory study, and the impacts that this burden has on the decision-makers’ behavior and the consistency of their decisions. We use psychophysiological, behavioral, and self-report methods. Our results suggest that a higher number of objectives (i) increases cognitive burden significantly, (ii) leads to adopting strategies in which only a limited number of objectives is considered, and (iii) decreases decision consistency.

Originalspråkengelska
TidskriftEuropean Journal of Operational Research
Volym322
Nummer1
Sidor (från-till)182-197
Antal sidor16
ISSN0377-2217
DOI
StatusPublicerad - 1 apr. 2025
MoE-publikationstypA1 Tidskriftsartikel-refererad

Bibliografisk information

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024

Vetenskapsgrenar

  • 512 Företagsekonomi

Citera det här