Human Inference: Strategies and Shortcomings of Social JudgmentPrentice-Hall, 1980 - 334 pages |
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Résultats 1-3 sur 54
Page 152
... presented to some subjects was the target's GPA expressed in percentile form , a virtually perfect predictor of numerical GPA . The information presented to a second group of subjects was the target's score on a mental concentration ...
... presented to some subjects was the target's GPA expressed in percentile form , a virtually perfect predictor of numerical GPA . The information presented to a second group of subjects was the target's score on a mental concentration ...
Page 172
... presented informa- tion , ( b ) circumstances producing strong contrast effects , and ( c ) presentation of information about an object or process which can be presumed to be capable of changing over time , so that later information ...
... presented informa- tion , ( b ) circumstances producing strong contrast effects , and ( c ) presentation of information about an object or process which can be presumed to be capable of changing over time , so that later information ...
Page 174
... presented information , if it is incon- sistent with the affective implications of early - presented information , is “ dis- counted " or given a lower weight by the subject . The discounting explanation can account for the primacy ...
... presented information , if it is incon- sistent with the affective implications of early - presented information , is “ dis- counted " or given a lower weight by the subject . The discounting explanation can account for the primacy ...
Table des matières
inferential problems and the formal scientific | 8 |
summary | 15 |
the representativeness heuristic | 24 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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Autres éditions - Tout afficher
Human Inference: Strategies and Shortcomings of Social Judgment Richard E. Nisbett,Lee Ross Affichage d'extraits - 1980 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
ability accuracy accurate actors Amos Tversky assessment attribution theory availability heuristic base rates base-rate behavior beliefs bias biased causal analysis causal attribution causal explanations causal theories causes chapter characterization classical conditioning cognitive colleagues concrete condition consensus information consider correlation covariation Daniel Kahneman Daryl Bem debriefing demonstration diagnostic domains effects estimates everyday evidence example experience experimental failure formal fundamental attribution error given human hypothesis Illusory correlation impact important individual inferences inferential strategies inferential tasks influence intuitive scientist judgments Kahneman knowledge structures layperson less likelihood manipulations motivational Nisbett and Wilson normative object observers one's outcomes particular people's perception perseverance person preconceptions predictions predictor primacy effects probably probative problems processes psychology question regression relatively relevant reported representativeness heuristic response Ross sample sample bias schema script seems simple situation Social Psychology sometimes sophomore slump statistical stereotypes stimuli target tendency tion Tversky typical variable versus vivid information