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From:
[log in to unmask] (Robert Goldfarb)
Date:
Fri Mar 31 17:18:42 2006
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----------------- HES POSTING ----------------- 
Report from the year 2054: Empirical Correlates of "Utility" 
 
It is the 50th anniversary of the HES bulletin board's discussion of "What 
is Something Worth?," in which the notion of "utility" was alternatively 
castigated (in a scholarly way, of course) and defended. Thus, it seems 
appropriate, if not timely, to revisit that discussion in light of the 
empirical breakthroughs in developing empirical correlates of "utility" in 
the decades since. 
 
The major breakthrough, came, of course, in 2032, when the noted 
econo-psychologist/psycho-economist and experimentalist (and generally 
smart cookie) Dr. Samuelson Snickerdoodle employed widely available 
technologies to measure what is arguably an empirical correlate of 
"utility." These technologies, widely available since the mid-20th century, 
allowed the measurement of changes in the level of brain activity caused by 
various stimuli the individual experienced. To put this in a  way 
consistent with utility notions, some heightened brain activities involved 
increased pleasurable sensations, others involved increased discomfort, and 
the experimenter could distinguish the two kinds of activities, and measure 
their frequency and intensity. Restating this in language more acceptable 
to current researchers in psychology, who today shy away from notions of 
"pleasure" and "pain," correlated brain activities could be distinguished 
and their frequency,  intensity and topography measured. 
 
Dr. Snickerdoodle's contribution had at least two components. One was 
conceptual. He recognized that heightened pleasurable brain activities 
might represent a convenient empirical interpretation of "utility", or (in  
more understandable language not wrapped up in arcane philosophical 
baggage) "satisfaction." His second contribution was technological. He 
developed an inexpensive miniaturization of the electronic machinery that 
allowed one to actually measure these "utility-correlate" changes using a 
small machine the size of a hearing aid, so that data could be collected by 
simply "sticking it in your ear", so to speak.[1] This allowed 
experimentalists at campuses (to say nothing of drug rehab clinics) to use  
the device to collect data from massive numbers of "subjects." Because Dr. 
Snickerdoodle was not lacking in wit, he called the units he was measuring 
"Jollies", as opposed to the more arcane "Utils" and the insufficiently  
poetic "SATs", which also had the problem of reading suspiciously like a 
college entrance exam. 
 
As with most measurement breakthroughs, the device and the results it 
produced were not universally accepted, for a wide variety of reasons. 
These included: 
 
1. The idea that, since man is, at least allegedly, a thinking being, there 
is more to "satisfaction" (or "utility")--if those concepts have any 
meaning--than "mere" changes in "pleasurable sensation" levels. 
 
2. The Heisenberg Ear problem: By trying to measure how the individual 
feels while he has something in his ear, we may not be getting measures of 
how (s)he would in fact feel without something in his ear. 
 
3. The Interpersonal Comparison Heisenberg Ear (or ICHE) problem: What if 
different individuals are differentially affected by having something in 
their ear? The long-standing problem of the probable illegitimacy of 
interpersonal "utility-correlate" comparisons once again raises its ugly 
head. 
 
4. The idea that the market would create incentives to misreport results, 
such as overstating the Jollies produced, and understating the possibility 
of satiation from, drinking a whole bunch of Pepsi s. (To guard against  
such dangers, many universities established Internal Ear Review Boards to 
monitor compliance with sound ear research. Attempts to study the utility 
effects of trying to deal with such Internal Ear Review Boards have gotten  
no place, since the Boards typically refuse to approve such research). 
 
5. A generalized fear that allowing psycho-economists to try to measure 
Jollies was a Dr. Strangelovian step into a kind of world we did not want 
to enter, one in which the government could monitor, and therefore 
manipulate, our perceptions of our own well-being. 
 
As one would expect, research proceeded even in the face of these potential 
difficulties. From the vantage point of 2054, what can we say about the 
bottom-line findings of this research? 
 
1. While it is hard experimentally to hold everything constant, it does 
appear that the marginal jollies (MJs) of most consumption goods do in fact 
decline "sooner or later." 
 
2. While most consumers do indeed often behave as though they were equating 
MRSs to ratios of prices, English Department faculty do not (But see 4 
below). 
 
3. The MJs from reading entries on the HES chat line diminishes faster than 
any other known good that has been tested. 
 
4. There are some commodities that "otherwise rational" people purchase and 
consume even though they produce no positive Jollies, and in fact increase 
negative brain sensations (see any Heavy Metal rock album, and some  
breakfast cereals). This has led to the well-known attempts to create a 
more general rational choice theory incorporating "rational craziness." 
(See in particular Gary Becker and Rush Limbaugh, "A Theory of Rational  
Craziness," JPE May 2041) 
 
5. Altruism does in fact sometimes generate a "warm glow" (that is, it 
produces measurable "Jollies"), but never when making campaign 
contributions. 
 
6. People who vote get MJs from voting; those who fail to vote do not 
(Recall that this was demonstrated by an experiment that induced people who 
had no intention of voting to actually vote). 
 
7. The on-going attempts, even in the face of the interpersonal comparison 
or ICHE problem, to build a new welfare economics based on Jolly Summation 
as a replacement for consumer surplus calculations. (See for example, the  
fascinating work on the Sum Jolly Jolly Jolly measure by Israeli 
economists). 
 
More generally, this whole research episode is a fascinating example of how 
the state of technology can affect whether a concept is a purely 
theoretical construct--and one subject to considerable controversy about 
its legitimacy-- or one that comes to have direct empirical application. It 
also indicates the benefits of cross-disciplinary work, of keeping one's 
ear to the ground for what is going on in other disciplines. 
 
 
 
--------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
----- 
 
[1] Writing in 2004, a technologically adept observer trained as an 
experimental psychologist, though no longer working in that field, noted 
that: 
 
"around 1970, I designed and built from readily available components a 
miniature biopotential transmitter that was about the size of  a 
wristwatch. Today I could build one small enough to  fit on the head of 
transducer (electrode). A commercial lab could easily  make one that would 
be barely visible. So the ear-minaturization idea is  eminently do-able if 
not actually done." 
 
 
 
Robert Goldfarb 
 
 
 
 
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