Availability Heuristic

Type: Memory β€” Recall Also Known As: Availability bias, ease of recall heuristic


Definition

Judging the likelihood or frequency of events based on how easily examples come to mind. We assume that if we can think of something easily, it must be common or important.

β€œI keep hearing about plane crashes. Flying must be really dangerous.”


Form

  1. A judgment about frequency or probability is required
  2. The mind searches for examples
  3. Easily recalled examples dominate the judgment
  4. Difficult-to-recall examples are underestimated

Examples

Example 1: Risk Assessment

After seeing a shark attack on the news, a tourist refuses to swim. The actual risk is 1 in 3.7 million, far lower than drowning (1 in 1,134).

Problem: Media coverage made shark attacks available in memory, distorting risk assessment.

Example 2: Hiring Decisions

A manager interviews a candidate who reminds them of a previous excellent hire. They overweight this similarity, ignoring other factors.

Problem: One vivid example dominated the evaluation.

Example 3: Investment Choices

An investor buys Tesla stock because they see Teslas everywhere and Elon Musk is constantly in the news. They ignore better-performing but less visible alternatives.

Problem: High media availability created false confidence in the investment.

Example 4: Public Policy

After a terrorist attack, public support for security measures spikes dramatically. Support for reducing heart disease (far deadlier) remains flat.

Problem: Dramatic, memorable events overshadow statistical realities.


Why It Happens

  • Recent events are easier to recall
  • Emotional/vivid events stick in memory
  • Media coverage creates artificial availability
  • The mind uses recall effort as a proxy for frequency
  • Evolution favored quick judgments over statistical accuracy

How to Counter

  1. Seek base rates: Look for actual statistics, not impressions
  2. Consider opposite: Actively search for counter-examples
  3. Time perspective: Ask β€œHow many times in the last year?”
  4. Multiple sources: Don’t rely on one memorable example
  5. Systematic tracking: Keep data on actual frequencies


References

  • Tversky, A. & Kahneman, D. (1973). Availability: A heuristic for judging frequency and probability
  • Schwarz, N. et al. (1991). Ease of retrieval as information
  • Schacter, D.L. (2001). The Seven Sins of Memory

Part of the Convergence Protocol β€” Clear thinking for complex times.