Subjects made judgments concerning the strength and direction of the contingency between two dichotomous variables in a situation in which no contingency actually existed. The judgments exhibited a significant primacy effect. The effects of warning and not warning the subjects that they would be required to recall the frequencies of observed event co-occurrences implied that this primacy effect was due to `attention decrement' ([Anderson, 1981]). According to this hypothesis, attention to contingency-relevant information diminishes after the subject is exposed to only a small portion of the available information.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/26089/1/0000165.pd
In two experiments, participants made causal judgments from contingency information for problems wit...
International audienceMany theories of contingency learning assume (either explicitly or implicitly)...
International audienceMany theories of contingency learning assume (either explicitly or implicitly)...
In contingency judgment a primacy effect exists when a conclusion about the relationship between cli...
In contingency judgment a primacy effect exists when a conclusion about the relationship between cli...
Contingency judgment is assumed to play a central role in prediction, control, and explanation. Here...
Theories of contingency judgements generally agree that (1) memory is a structure that possesses a l...
Four experiments examined trial sequencing effects in human contingency judgment. In Experiments 1-3...
A contingency judgment entails an evaluation of the predictive relation between a cue and an outcome...
Traditional associative models assume that associative weights are updated on a trial-by-trial basis...
Many theories of contingency learning assume (either explicitly or implicitly) that predicting wheth...
Covariation information can be used to infer whether a causal link plausibly exists between two dich...
Two types of model may account for how people learn and make judgments about contingent relationship...
In two experiments, participants made causal judgments from contingency information for problems wit...
In two experiments, participants made causal judgments from contingency information for problems wit...
In two experiments, participants made causal judgments from contingency information for problems wit...
International audienceMany theories of contingency learning assume (either explicitly or implicitly)...
International audienceMany theories of contingency learning assume (either explicitly or implicitly)...
In contingency judgment a primacy effect exists when a conclusion about the relationship between cli...
In contingency judgment a primacy effect exists when a conclusion about the relationship between cli...
Contingency judgment is assumed to play a central role in prediction, control, and explanation. Here...
Theories of contingency judgements generally agree that (1) memory is a structure that possesses a l...
Four experiments examined trial sequencing effects in human contingency judgment. In Experiments 1-3...
A contingency judgment entails an evaluation of the predictive relation between a cue and an outcome...
Traditional associative models assume that associative weights are updated on a trial-by-trial basis...
Many theories of contingency learning assume (either explicitly or implicitly) that predicting wheth...
Covariation information can be used to infer whether a causal link plausibly exists between two dich...
Two types of model may account for how people learn and make judgments about contingent relationship...
In two experiments, participants made causal judgments from contingency information for problems wit...
In two experiments, participants made causal judgments from contingency information for problems wit...
In two experiments, participants made causal judgments from contingency information for problems wit...
International audienceMany theories of contingency learning assume (either explicitly or implicitly)...
International audienceMany theories of contingency learning assume (either explicitly or implicitly)...