Human Judgment and Decision Making: Theories, Methods, and ProceduresPraeger, 1980 - 258 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 42
Seite 140
... stimuli . However , these prior conceptual decompositions of the stimuli are not apparent to the subject , who usually sees one or only a few of the stimuli when whole , nondecomposed objects are used . 12.2 SCHEMATIC STIMULI The ...
... stimuli . However , these prior conceptual decompositions of the stimuli are not apparent to the subject , who usually sees one or only a few of the stimuli when whole , nondecomposed objects are used . 12.2 SCHEMATIC STIMULI The ...
Seite 142
... stimuli are not apparent to the judge . ( But see Lichtenstein , Slovic , Fischhoff , Layman & Combs , 1978 , for an explicit attempt to make subjects aware of the representativeness and availability variables on which their stimuli ...
... stimuli are not apparent to the judge . ( But see Lichtenstein , Slovic , Fischhoff , Layman & Combs , 1978 , for an explicit attempt to make subjects aware of the representativeness and availability variables on which their stimuli ...
Seite 145
... stimuli tend to favor nomothetic methods because of difficulties in constructing many stimuli , while idiographic methods based on many judg ments of different objects more often require the use of easily constructable and repeatable ...
... stimuli tend to favor nomothetic methods because of difficulties in constructing many stimuli , while idiographic methods based on many judg ments of different objects more often require the use of easily constructable and repeatable ...
Inhalt
THEORY | 6 |
Introduction to Theory | 17 |
4 | 24 |
Urheberrecht | |
17 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
aggregation across judges alternatives ambiguity analysis ANOVA applied Attribution Theory axioms basic research Bayesian Brunswik causal Chapter choice concepts criterion cues debiasing decision analyst decision maker decision problems decision processes decomposition described descriptive dimensions double-system DT and BDT ecological validity Edwards empirical environment evaluation example expected utility feedback formal task function forms Group II approaches Hammond Heider human judgment idiographic method important indicate individuals inference INTEGRATION THEORY intended function involving judgment and decision judgment or decision Kahneman Keeney and Raiffa lens model levels logical lotteries measurement methodological multiattribute multiple n-system nomothetic methods observable task elements operationalizes optimality ordinarily organizing principles probabilities and utilities probability estimation procedures prospect theory PSYCHOLOGICAL DECISION THEORY psychophysics response Shanteau single-system six approaches Slovic SOCIAL JUDGMENT THEORY specific statistical stimuli studies subjective data subjective expected utility subjective probability theoretical theorists tion Tversky uncertainty utility function variables