Scientists reveal a widespread but unidentified psychological phenomenon

30 thunderbong 22 7/20/2025, 12:14:52 PM psypost.org ↗

Comments (22)

florbnit · 6h ago
I feel like there’s scientists must have spent a long time researching this seemingly new phenomenon before discovering that the sunk cost fallacy was widely studied. And at that point rather than spend the effort to correct their conclusions they decided to double down and spend even more effort on trying to spin their work as something new and unrelated to the sunk cost fallacy.
seanhunter · 5h ago
…thereby falling victim to the sunk cost fallacy themselves, amusingly.

Reminds me of the medical researcher Mary Tai[1] who published "A Mathematical Model for the Determination of Total Area Under Glucose Tolerance and Other Metabolic Curves" (ie reinvented integral calculus) and tried to double down in a similar fashion.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tai's_model

ameliaquining · 2h ago
From the paper (internal citations omitted):

"This newly documented phenomenon has similarities with and differences from the sunk-cost fallacy; we see them as part of the same family of effects. In one instantiation, the sunk-cost fallacy can dissuade people from completing a goal (e.g., attending a show) if their initial investment failed to yield a return (e.g., a purchased ticket was lost). With doubling-back aversion, the question is not whether people complete a goal but rather what may discourage them from doing so efficiently. In another example, people display unwarranted escalations of commitment—irrationally persevering on a goal—in the hopes of delaying (and possibly escaping) an admission that their initial investments were actually misguided. Losses simply pile up as a result. Doubling-back aversion discourages people from issuing a course correction even when doing so would not require them to accept responsibility for choosing that longer course in the first place. After all, our participants had to travel down a pathway to even see that there was another route available or were first assigned to complete a task in a particular way before they were offered an alternative. That said, both phenomena emphasize that people do not want to take actions that would force themselves to view their previous efforts as a waste, although with doubling-back aversion it was not a waste that they could have avoided."

Is this the most groundbreaking study ever? No. But the researchers do seem to have found something worthy of comment, and I see no reason to believe that they weren't aware of the existing literature on the sunk cost fallacy when they started working on this. In general, you can't dismiss a study as trivially flawed or useless based solely on a popularization for general audiences; such popular explanations often omit context required to make the study make sense for scientifically literate people. Read the actual paper before dismissing it.

LeftHandPath · 5h ago
I wonder if the sunk cost fallacy - that usually refers to an abstract cost, like time or money - would truly be the same effect as an aversion to retracing a path in 3D space.

Possible, or even likely, but interesting nonetheless. Towards the end of the article, they describe an interesting other direction of their research that's not so directly correlated with sunk cost:

> More recently, we’ve been examining a related form of hesitation. This time, it’s not in switching paths, but in committing to one at all.

> “While it might seem that having enticing options (e.g., a great apartment one could rent, a fun event one could sign up for) would make commitment easier, we’ve found that it’s often the loss of a great option that finally pushes people to choose. People often hold out for something even better, but the disappearance of a pretty good option inspires some pessimism that encourages people to grab onto what is as good as they can get for now.”

jimkleiber · 4h ago
The irony, eh?

Having the sunk cost fallacy while researching the sunk cost fallacy.

bhk · 5h ago
"Scientists reveal a previously unidentified term for a widely known phenomenon"
mozeu2 · 4h ago
I see what you did there
scandox · 4h ago
My wife calls it going backwards to go forward and she can't stand it. Even planning a trip across multiple countries she needed our overall flight plans to move in a single direction.
thelastgallon · 4h ago
Brian does not want to work like a GPS to continuously suggest an alternate route. The purpose of thinking is not to think. Thinking is hard work and it takes some effort to make a decision. Once a decision is made, to constantly reevaluate the decision takes extraordinary mental energy and a mindset thats second guessing your own decisions every second.
unsupp0rted · 5h ago
> The aversion was strongest when both components of doubling back were present — undoing past work and starting over with a full task.

E.g. Cursor’s “Discard and revert” option, which I miss in Claude Code.

Cursor trains us out of the aversion to doubling back.

thelastgallon · 4h ago
Looks like this experiment is conducted in US. If you are walking in US, you'll end up on nextdoor and if you went one way, changed your mind and went the other way, your picture will be on nextdoor from many people's ring/etc cameras, reporting a suspicious person walking on the street and if other neighbors have seen this suspicious person.
7bit · 6h ago
What an interesting phenomenon.

I recently walked through the city to visit some shop, of which there are two in the city. While walking, I noticed that the one I was walking to is actually farther than the other one. The shorter one actually needed me to backtrack like 500m. I decided to keep walking to the farther one, simply because taking the new route would at least give me new impressions, instead of seeing the same building left and right when backtracking. While walking the farther way, I believe it felt shorter, because time passes slower when backtracking.

Not disputing the results, it's just how I experience the world personally, and that only touches the backtracking.

elhenrico · 6h ago
Yeah, I’m not sure if it was considered in the study, but I like taking new paths just to see what I stumble upon.
pstuart · 1h ago
I see this all the time in tech, where a solution is found for a problem, but later that solution will have problems of its own. Then the focus becomes solving the solution's problem, and even the solution's problem solution's problems.

All that in lieu of coming back to the original problem and rethinking how to solve it.

taneq · 6h ago
Seems like it would be a survival trait in the wild. Doubling back reduces your exploration rate (you're not updating your map as much and you're less likely to spot some new snack) while increasing your exposure to unknown predators that might have been alerted but not positively identified you the first time. There's still good reasons to double back, like trying to outwit a known, active pursuer or evader, or being in a very hazardous environment. All else being equal, though, I'd think continuing forward would be more beneficial overall.
heisenbit · 6h ago
The path is the goal.
agumonkey · 5h ago
Exploration is a reward sometimes. You get to see unexpected.
constantcrying · 5h ago
There is also the fact that often sticking with a mediocre or even bad decision heavily outperforms changing your mind constantly.
constantcrying · 6h ago
This "unknown phenomenon" is so unknown that it is one of the most discussed topics in behavioral psychology. Even in popular science it is well known.

Some of the most well known books about psychology, like "thinking fast and slow", describe how humans act seemingly irrational under various scenarios. Finding another example is the exact opposite of "unidentified".

Surely the researchers must be aware of the discourse and the competing theories to explain the thousands of other examples of this?

WalterGR · 5h ago
They’re probably aware. From the paper:

> We end by discussing how doubling-back aversion is distinct from established phenomena (e.g., the sunk-cost fallacy).

Is the author of this pop sci article aware? Hard to tell.

constantcrying · 2h ago
How is that relevant at all?

They pretend that behavioral psychology somehow isn't aware that perceived human irrationality is very common.

Finding just another example of that is not noticing a previously unobserved phenomenon.

dcre · 5h ago
What a bizarre headline.