Human Judgment and Decision Making: Theories, Methods, and Procedures |
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Seite 65
Most important , does the concept of “ uncertainty ” convey the same meaning to
all researchers in the field of “ judgment and decision under conditions of
uncertainty ” ? As we have seen earlier there is doubt as to whether judgment
and ...
Most important , does the concept of “ uncertainty ” convey the same meaning to
all researchers in the field of “ judgment and decision under conditions of
uncertainty ” ? As we have seen earlier there is doubt as to whether judgment
and ...
Seite 71
6.5 SOCIAL JUDGMENT THEORY SJT is the first approach to be encountered in
moving across the conceptual watershed between Group I and II approaches
because of the great emphasis on the concept of uncertainty that it shares with ...
6.5 SOCIAL JUDGMENT THEORY SJT is the first approach to be encountered in
moving across the conceptual watershed between Group I and II approaches
because of the great emphasis on the concept of uncertainty that it shares with ...
Seite 75
IIT may be further discriminated from SJT by IIT's omission of uncertainty ( and its
derivative , probability ) from its list of fundamental concepts . Thus IIT moves
further from General Approach I than SJT in that ( a ) uncertainty is not a ...
IIT may be further discriminated from SJT by IIT's omission of uncertainty ( and its
derivative , probability ) from its list of fundamental concepts . Thus IIT moves
further from General Approach I than SJT in that ( a ) uncertainty is not a ...
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Inhalt
THEORY | 6 |
Introduction to Theory | 17 |
Scope | 31 |
Urheberrecht | |
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aggregation aids alternatives analysis appears applied asked attributes basic behavior Brunswik causal Chapter characteristics choice claims cognitive combinations common complex concepts concerned construction criterion cues decision maker DECISION THEORY decomposition defined described descriptive developed dimensions direct discussed distinction Edwards effects efforts empirical environment environmental evaluation example formal function given Group Hammond human idiographic important independence indicate individuals inference integration intended interest involving judges judgment and decision Keeney knowledge levels logical major means measurement methods multiple nomothetic noted objective observable offers optimality organizing principles origins persons possible preference present probability problem procedures processes psychological questions regard relative representativeness require respect response scale similar six approaches social specific statistical stimuli studies subjective task theoretical theorists Tversky uncertainty usually utility variables various weights