Y12W20VC The same fact, two versions, opposite reactions
Two hundred people will die of a rare disease unless you choose a treatment. Programme A will save 200. Programme B has a one-third chance of saving all 600 and a two-thirds chance of saving nobody. Which do you choose? Most people pick A. Now imagine the problem worded in terms of people dying rather than saved. The preferences flip. This week's article examines why.
Core Vocabulary
framing
/ˈfreɪmɪŋ/|fram·ing
noun
The way information is presented or structured, which influences how people perceive and respond to that information.
Word family: frame (v.), framed (v./adj.)
Synonyms: presentation, context, perspective
Collocations: framing effect, framing bias, reframing the problem
Example: The two framings describe exactly the same outcomes, but people's preferences reverse depending on whether the numbers are presented as lives saved or lives lost.
aversion
/əˈvɜːʃən/|a·ver·sion
noun
A strong feeling of dislike, opposition, or avoidance towards something.
Word Breakdown: a- (away, Latin) + -vert (turn) + -sion (act of)
Word family: avert (v.), adverse (v.)
Synonyms: dislike, opposition, reluctance
Collocations: risk aversion, loss aversion, strong aversion
Example: Risk aversion in the face of life-and-death stakes is a defensible response.
identical
/aɪˈdentɪkəl/|i·den·ti·cal
adjective
Exactly the same in every respect; showing no difference.
Word Breakdown: id- (same, Latin) + -entical (relating to)
Word family: identity (v.), identify (v.)
Synonyms: same, equivalent, indistinguishable
Collocations: identical outcomes, identical information, identical options
Example: These are the same two options, and the two framings describe exactly the same outcomes.
reaction
/riˈækʃən/|re·ac·tion
noun
A response or reply to something; the way someone or something responds to a stimulus or event.
Word Breakdown: re- (back, Latin) + -action (act of)
Word family: react (v.), reactive (v.)
Synonyms: response, reply, answer
Collocations: immediate reaction, adverse reaction, gut reaction
Example: Most people's preferences reverse, depending on whether the numbers are presented as lives saved or lives lost.
presentation
/ˌprezənˈteɪʃən/|pres·en·ta·tion
noun
The manner or style in which something is shown, displayed, or delivered to an audience.
Word Breakdown: pre- (before, Latin) + -sent (show) + -ation (act of)
Word family: present (v.), presented (v./adj.)
Synonyms: display, delivery, exposition
Collocations: clear presentation, effective presentation, visual presentation
Example: Those reference points are easily manipulated by how information is presented.
equivalent
/ɪˈkwɪvələnt/|e·quiv·a·lent
adjective
Equal in value, meaning, or importance; corresponding in effect or function.
Word Breakdown: equiv- (equal, Latin) + -alent (having the weight of)
Word family: equivalence (v.), equivalently (adv.)
Synonyms: equal, corresponding, comparable
Collocations: equivalent amount, roughly equivalent, equivalent value
Example: Losses hurt about twice as much as equivalent gains feel good.
rhetorical
/rɪˈtɒrɪkəl/|rhe·tor·i·cal
adjective
Relating to the art of persuasive or effective speaking and writing; designed to impress rather than to inform.
Word family: rhetoric (v.), rhetorically (adv.)
Synonyms: persuasive, oratorical, eloquent
Collocations: rhetorical question, rhetorical device, rhetorical flourish
Example: A debate framed as 'tax relief' has already taken a position—it implies taxes are a burden to be relieved.
dominant
/ˈdɒmɪnənt/|dom·i·nant
adjective
Most powerful, influential, or noticeable; prevailing or commanding.
Word Breakdown: domin- (rule, Latin) + -ant (having the quality of)
Word family: dominate (v.), domination (n.)
Synonyms: prevailing, leading, primary
Collocations: dominant position, dominant strategy, dominant factor
Example: Political parties spend enormous resources trying to establish the framings in which issues are discussed, not just the positions within those framings.
Technical Terms
framing effect
/ˈfreɪmɪŋ ɪˈfekt/|fram·ing ef·fect
noun phrase
Kahneman and Tversky's finding that identical information produces different decisions depending on how it is presented (as gains or losses).
Synonyms: related term, similar concept
Collocations: demonstrate the framing effect, research on framing effect, classic framing effect
Example: This is called the framing effect, and it's one of the most consequential findings in all of behavioural science.
loss aversion
/lɔːs əˈvɜːʃən/|loss a·ver·sion
noun phrase
The tendency for people to feel the impact of losses about twice as strongly as equivalent gains; losses are psychologically more powerful than gains.
Synonyms: related term, similar concept
Collocations: loss aversion bias, loss aversion research, driven by loss aversion
Example: This asymmetry is connected to the loss-aversion finding we've covered elsewhere in this series—losses hurt about twice as much as equivalent gains feel good.
prospect theory
/ˈprɒspekt ˈθɪəri/|pros·pect the·o·ry
noun phrase
Kahneman and Tversky's model of decision-making under risk, showing that people evaluate options relative to reference points rather than on absolute merit.
Synonyms: related term, similar concept
Collocations: prospect theory explains, according to prospect theory
Example: Humans don't really evaluate options on their absolute merits; they evaluate them relative to reference points.
anchoring
/ˈæŋkərɪŋ/|an·chor·ing
noun
The cognitive bias in which people rely too heavily on an initial reference point (anchor) when making decisions, even if that reference point is arbitrary or irrelevant.
Word family: anchor (v.), anchored (v./adj.)
Synonyms: anchoring bias, reference dependence
Collocations: anchoring effect, anchoring bias, serve as an anchor
Example: A baseline of harm (lives saved) or a baseline of safety (lives lost) serve as anchors that determine how people evaluate the options.
gain frame vs. loss frame
/ɡeɪn freɪm vərsəs lɔːs freɪm/|gain frame vs. loss frame
noun phrase
Two contrasting ways of presenting the same information: as potential gains (gain frame) or as potential losses (loss frame), which produces opposite decision preferences.
Synonyms: related term, similar concept
Collocations: gain-framed vs. loss-framed, gain frame produces, loss frame produces
Example: When outcomes are framed as gains, people become risk-averse; when framed as losses, people become risk-seeking.
Figurative Phrases
half full, half empty
A classic idiom contrasting two framings of the same fact: the optimistic view versus the pessimistic view. Used to show how perspective changes interpretation without changing reality.
Etymology/Type: Idiomatic contrast; the same glass is described oppositely, highlighting how framing shapes perception.
Synonyms: two ways of seeing the same fact, optimistic vs pessimistic framing, how you frame it
Example: The glass is half full or half empty—the same amount of liquid, different framing, different emotional response.
put a spin on
To present information with a particular bias or slant; to frame something in a way that favours a particular interpretation. 'Spin' is figurative.
Etymology/Type: Metaphor; spinning a ball changes its trajectory, applied figuratively to presenting information with particular bias.
Synonyms: frame it a certain way, slant it, present it with bias
Example: Political parties put a spin on policy debates by choosing which framing to emphasise.
the lens through which
A metaphor describing the perspective or interpretive framework used to view something. 'Lens' is figurative, not literal.
Etymology/Type: Metaphor; a lens filters and refracts light, applied to perspective or interpretive framework.
Synonyms: the perspective you use, the framework you apply, the way you see it
Example: The framing acts as the lens through which people interpret the identical information.
paint a picture
To present or describe something in a way that creates a vivid mental image. 'Picture' and 'paint' are figurative; no literal painting occurs.
Etymology/Type: Art metaphor; painting creates a vivid image, applied figuratively to presenting something that creates impression.
Synonyms: frame it vividly, present it in a way that creates an impression, describe it in a particular light
Example: Medical communication can paint a picture of either safety or danger depending on whether survival or mortality rates are emphasized.
cast in a different light
To present or interpret something differently, changing how it is perceived. 'Light' is figurative, not literal illumination.
Etymology/Type: Lighting metaphor; changing the light changes what is visible and how it appears, applied to presenting differently.
Synonyms: reframe it, present it differently, show it from another angle
Example: The same fund's performance can be cast in a different light depending on whether gains or underperformance is emphasized.
the same coin, two sides
A metaphor expressing that two opposing perspectives or framings describe one underlying reality. 'Sides' of a coin are figurative complementary aspects.
Etymology/Type: Metaphor; a coin is one object but has two distinct sides, expressing that opposing views are part of one reality.
Synonyms: two aspects of one reality, opposite faces of the same thing, two perspectives on one issue
Example: Lives saved and lives lost are the same coin, two sides—identical information, opposite framings, reversed preferences.
Confusing Words
framing vs. framework
These are different grammatical forms of the same root word, and using one when you mean the other can obscure your meaning.
- framing = a structure, system, or underlying conceptual model that organises understanding; more permanent and foundational than framing. Framing is dynamic (changes with presentation); framework is structural (provides the underlying system). — relevant example usage.
- framework = a structure, system, or underlying conceptual model that organises understanding; more permanent and foundational than framing. Framing is dynamic (changes with presentation); framework is structural (provides the underlying system). — relevant example usage.
Use framing when the act or manner of presenting information; the way somethi. Use framework when a structure, system, or underlying conceptual model that org.
equivalent (equal in value) vs. equivalent (corresponding)
This word is a polyseme — it carries two related but distinct meanings that are easy to conflate.
- Equivalent (equal in value): two things that have the same quantity, worth, or effect — 'One mile is equivalent to approximately 1.6 kilometres.'
- Equivalent (corresponding): a thing that plays the same role or holds the same position in a different context — 'The French baccalauréat is the equivalent of the British A-level.'
Ask: are you saying two things are numerically or measurably the same (equal in value), or that one thing plays the same role as another in a different context (corresponding)? The first is mathematical equivalence; the second is functional equivalence.
dominant vs. predominant
These are near-synonyms — they are related in meaning but differ in important ways, and using one when you mean the other can obscure your meaning.
- dominant = most common, widespread, or frequently occurring. A person can be dominant (commanding authority); a trend can be predominant (most common). Dominant is about power or control; predominant is about frequency or prevalence. — relevant example usage.
- predominant = most common, widespread, or frequently occurring. A person can be dominant (commanding authority); a trend can be predominant (most common). Dominant is about power or control; predominant is about frequency or prevalence. — relevant example usage.
Use dominant when most powerful, influential, or commanding; has authority or . Use predominant when most common, widespread, or frequently occurring.
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