This article concerns the effect of context on people's judgments about sequences of chance outcomes. In Experiment 1, participants judged whether sequences were produced by random, mechanical processes (such as a roulette wheel) or skilled human action (such as basketball shots). Sequences with lower alternation rates were judged more likely to result from human action. However, this effect was highly context-dependent: A moderate alternation rate was judged more likely to indicate a random physical process when encountered among sequences with lower alternation rates than when embedded among sequences with higher alternation rates. Experiment 2 found the same effect for predictions of the next outcome following a streak: A streak of 3 at ...
Four experiments study relative frequency judgment and recall of sequentially presented items drawn ...
a b s t r a c t When required to predict sequential events, such as random coin tosses or basketball...
This research continues the longstanding tradition of taking an interdisciplinary approach to studie...
This paper concerns the effect of context on people’s judgments about sequences of chance outcomes. ...
Distinguishing between random and non-random data is important for inductive reasoning. Prior resear...
People are often biased in their perception of randomness in that they tend to see patterns in rando...
When predicting the next outcome in a sequence of events, people often appear to expect streaky patt...
A long tradition of psychological research has lamented the systematic errors and biases in people’s...
In the mind of many people chance and luck act as real but different causes of events. Even in stric...
We report on six experiments studying participants’ predictions of the next outcome in a sequence of...
Human randomness perception is commonly described as biased. This is because when generating random ...
Humans possess a remarkable ability to discriminate structure from randomness in the environment. Ho...
We report on six experiments studying participants’ predictions of the next outcome in a sequence of...
People’s intuitions about mathematical and statistical concepts often include features that are not ...
AbstractPsychologists have studied people's intuitive notions of randomness by two kinds of tasks: j...
Four experiments study relative frequency judgment and recall of sequentially presented items drawn ...
a b s t r a c t When required to predict sequential events, such as random coin tosses or basketball...
This research continues the longstanding tradition of taking an interdisciplinary approach to studie...
This paper concerns the effect of context on people’s judgments about sequences of chance outcomes. ...
Distinguishing between random and non-random data is important for inductive reasoning. Prior resear...
People are often biased in their perception of randomness in that they tend to see patterns in rando...
When predicting the next outcome in a sequence of events, people often appear to expect streaky patt...
A long tradition of psychological research has lamented the systematic errors and biases in people’s...
In the mind of many people chance and luck act as real but different causes of events. Even in stric...
We report on six experiments studying participants’ predictions of the next outcome in a sequence of...
Human randomness perception is commonly described as biased. This is because when generating random ...
Humans possess a remarkable ability to discriminate structure from randomness in the environment. Ho...
We report on six experiments studying participants’ predictions of the next outcome in a sequence of...
People’s intuitions about mathematical and statistical concepts often include features that are not ...
AbstractPsychologists have studied people's intuitive notions of randomness by two kinds of tasks: j...
Four experiments study relative frequency judgment and recall of sequentially presented items drawn ...
a b s t r a c t When required to predict sequential events, such as random coin tosses or basketball...
This research continues the longstanding tradition of taking an interdisciplinary approach to studie...