Inferential Correction
- 8 July 2002
- book chapter
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Abstract
It is sometimes said that Tversky and Kahneman (1974) described two-and a-half heuristics. Although the bulk of the research inspired by their seminal paper has indeed focused on the representativeness and availability heuristics, the remaining half-heuristic may well be the one that psychologists not yet born will consider the most important. Why? Because whereas the celebrity heuristics describe processes by which people make particular kinds of judgments (i.e., frequency and probability judgments on the one hand; categorical identity judgments on the other), their obscure sibling – anchoring and adjustment – describes the process by which the human mind does virtually all of its inferential work. Indeed, one of psychology's fundamental insights is that judgments are generally the products of nonconscious systems that operate quickly, on the basis of scant evidence, and in a routine manner, and then pass their hurried approximations to consciousness, which slowly and deliberately adjusts them. In this sense, anchoring and adjustment is a fundamental description of mental life. This chapter reviews some work on adjustment – or what my collaborators and I call correction processes – in the domain of dispositional inference. A CORRECTION MODEL OF DISPOSITIONAL INFERENCE We care about what others do, but we care more about why they do it. Two equally rambunctious nephews may break two equally expensive crystal vases at Aunt Sofia's house, but the one who did so by accident gets the reprimand and the one who did so by design gets the thumbscrews.Keywords
This publication has 1002 references indexed in Scilit:
- Individual Differences in Disgust Sensitivity: Comparisons and Evaluations of Paper-and-Pencil versus Behavioral MeasuresJournal of Research in Personality, 1999
- Similarity between Hypotheses and EvidenceCognitive Psychology, 1999
- States of Affairs and States of Mind: The Effect of Knowledge of BeliefsOrganizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 1995
- The Borders of the Self: Contamination Sensitivity and Potency of the Body Apertures and Other Body PartsJournal of Research in Personality, 1995
- Item Difficulty, Discrimination, and the Confidence-Frequency Effect in a Categorical Judgment TaskOrganizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 1995
- The Effects of Task Characteristics on Covariation Assessment: The Impact of Accountability and Judgment FrameOrganizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 1994
- Internal Cue Theory: Calibration and Resolution of Confidence in General KnowledgeOrganizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 1994
- The Overconfidence Phenomenon as a Consequence of Informal Experimenter-Guided Selection of Almanac ItemsOrganizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 1994
- Who Uses the Cost-Benefit Rules of Choice? Implications for the Normative Status of Microeconomic TheoryOrganizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 1993
- Reasons for Framing EffectsOrganizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 1993