Human randomness perception is commonly described as biased. This is because when generating random sequences humans tend to systematically under- and overrepresent certain subsequences relative to the number expected from an unbiased random process. In a purely theoretical analysis we have previously suggested that common misperceptions of randomness may actually reflect genuine aspects of the statistical environment, once cognitive constraints are taken into account which impact on how that environment is actually experienced (Hahn & Warren, Psychological Review, 2009). In the present study we undertake an empirical test of this account, comparing human-generated against unbiased process-generated binary sequences in two experiments. ...
<p>(A) Data redrawn from Falk (1975) and reported in [<a href="http://www.ploscompbiol.org/article/i...
This paper concerns the effect of context on people’s judgments about sequences of chance outcomes. ...
Psychological research has found that human perception of randomness is biased. In particular, peopl...
Human randomness perception is commonly described as biased. This is because when generating random ...
AbstractPsychologists have studied people's intuitive notions of randomness by two kinds of tasks: j...
People are often biased in their perception of randomness in that they tend to see patterns in rando...
Humans possess a remarkable ability to discriminate structure from randomness in the environment. Ho...
Randomness is a fundamental property of human behavior. It occurs both in the form of intrinsic rand...
The environment is inherently noisy, with regularities and randomness. Therefore, the challenge for ...
A long tradition of psychological research has lamented the systematic errors and biases in people’s...
This is a phenomenographic study of learners’ perceptions of randomness. Underpinning the study is a...
We present a statistical account for the subjective probability of alternation in people’s perceptio...
<p>Abstract copyright data collection owner.</p>Data collected under ESRC transformative research aw...
People generally fail to produce random sequences by overusing alternating patterns and avoiding rep...
Distinguishing between random and non-random data is important for inductive reasoning. Prior resear...
<p>(A) Data redrawn from Falk (1975) and reported in [<a href="http://www.ploscompbiol.org/article/i...
This paper concerns the effect of context on people’s judgments about sequences of chance outcomes. ...
Psychological research has found that human perception of randomness is biased. In particular, peopl...
Human randomness perception is commonly described as biased. This is because when generating random ...
AbstractPsychologists have studied people's intuitive notions of randomness by two kinds of tasks: j...
People are often biased in their perception of randomness in that they tend to see patterns in rando...
Humans possess a remarkable ability to discriminate structure from randomness in the environment. Ho...
Randomness is a fundamental property of human behavior. It occurs both in the form of intrinsic rand...
The environment is inherently noisy, with regularities and randomness. Therefore, the challenge for ...
A long tradition of psychological research has lamented the systematic errors and biases in people’s...
This is a phenomenographic study of learners’ perceptions of randomness. Underpinning the study is a...
We present a statistical account for the subjective probability of alternation in people’s perceptio...
<p>Abstract copyright data collection owner.</p>Data collected under ESRC transformative research aw...
People generally fail to produce random sequences by overusing alternating patterns and avoiding rep...
Distinguishing between random and non-random data is important for inductive reasoning. Prior resear...
<p>(A) Data redrawn from Falk (1975) and reported in [<a href="http://www.ploscompbiol.org/article/i...
This paper concerns the effect of context on people’s judgments about sequences of chance outcomes. ...
Psychological research has found that human perception of randomness is biased. In particular, peopl...