Human Judgment and Decision Making: Theories, Methods, and Procedures |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 41
Seite 88
W ogy is littered with the wreckage of plausibility arguments , and ( c ) that it may
well be difficult to ascertain organism - centered definitions of these variables in
the more ambiguous circumstances of real world ( test ) questions . ( Cf . the rise
...
W ogy is littered with the wreckage of plausibility arguments , and ( c ) that it may
well be difficult to ascertain organism - centered definitions of these variables in
the more ambiguous circumstances of real world ( test ) questions . ( Cf . the rise
...
Seite 140
2 SCHEMATIC STIMULI The obvious alternative to presenting complete objects
is to display a conceptual decomposition of these objects to the judge in
schematic form . That is , the stimuli are described in terms of the key variables ,
cues , etc ...
2 SCHEMATIC STIMULI The obvious alternative to presenting complete objects
is to display a conceptual decomposition of these objects to the judge in
schematic form . That is , the stimuli are described in terms of the key variables ,
cues , etc ...
Seite 142
Certainly , the important variables which differentiate 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 ...
Certainly , the important variables which differentiate 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 ...
Was andere dazu sagen - Rezension schreiben
Es wurden keine Rezensionen gefunden.
Inhalt
THEORY | 6 |
Scope | 31 |
Loci of Concepts | 91 |
Urheberrecht | |
15 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
achievement aggregation aids alternatives analysis appears applied attempt attributes basic Bayesian behavior Brunswik causal Chapter choice claims cognitive complex concepts concerned considered cues decision maker DECISION THEORY described descriptive dimensions direct discussed distinction Edwards effects efforts empirical employed environment environmental estimates evaluation example formal function given Group Group II approaches human idiographic important independence indicate individual inference integration intended interest interpersonal involving judges judgment and decision Keeney knowing knowledge learning logical major means measurement methods nomothetic noted objective observable offers optimality organizing origins persons present principles probability problem procedures psychological questions Raiffa refers regard relation representativeness require response scale similar single-system six approaches social specific statistical stimuli studies subjective task theoretical theorists Tversky uncertainty utility variables various weights