Week Three Flashcards

Making Likelihood Judgements | Representativeness Heuristic | Two Fallacies

1
Q

Uncertainty

A

Statistical definition: The probability of an event occurring is not equal to 0 or 1

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2
Q

Likelihood judgement

A

Judgement of how probable an event is to occur or how likely a statement is to be true

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3
Q

Heuristics (probabilities)

A
  • Used under the condition of uncertainty
  • Simplifies the procedure for obtaining a probability
  • Reduces the complexity of obtaining a probability
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4
Q

Availability Heuristic

A

“People assess the frequency of a class or the probability of an event by the ease with which instances or occurrences can be brought to mind” (Tversky & Kahneman, 1974, p 1127)

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5
Q

Question: Do people use the availability heuristic when estimating frequencies?

A

YES - People use the availability heuristic when estimating frequencies

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6
Q

Method: Relative frequency-of-occurrence judgement

A
  • Participants given or asked to generate lists of two possible events or items
  • Participants asked to determine which item event occurs more frequently
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7
Q

Question: Do people use the availability heuristic to estimate frequencies when the actual frequencies are presented?

A

YES - When people estimate frequencies based on available information, people use the availability heuristic

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8
Q

Method: Set-size judgement

A
  • Participants asked to estimate the number of items in the set or class
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9
Q

The law of small numbers

A

The tendency to think of small samples that appear random are representative of the population

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10
Q

Do people use the representativeness heuristic?

A
  • YES: people use the representativeness heuristic
  • As a consequence, people commit the base-rate fallacy and/or the conjunction fallacy
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11
Q

Base rate

A

Statistics:
- Unconditional probability
- Probability that does not take into account any existing evidence

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12
Q

Base rate fallacy

A

When people estimate probabilities:
- People ignore relevant statistical information
- People favor information based on a single case

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13
Q

Conjunction fallacy

A
  • People fail to consider the implications of the word “and” when making probability judgements
  • The probability of any one uncertain event can’t be less than the probability that this event and another uncertain event will occur together
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