Across a wide range of domains, experts make probabilistic judgments under conditions of uncertainty to support decision-making. These judgments are often conveyed using linguistic expressions (e.g., x is likely). Seeking to foster shared understanding of these expressions between senders and receivers, the US intelligence community implemented a communication standard that prescribes a set of probability terms and assigns each term an equivalent numerical probability range. In an earlier PLOS ONE article, [1] tested whether access to the standard improves shared understanding and also explored the efficacy of various enhanced presentation formats. Notably, they found that embedding numeric equivalents in text (e.g., x is likely [55-80%]) s...
The way in which information about proportions, amounts, frequencies, probabilities, degrees of conf...
Prior research suggests that humans rationally integrate semantic expectations and the likelihood of...
For 20 different studies, Table 1 tabulates numerical averages of opinions on quantitative meanings ...
Individual variation in the interpretation and application of linguistic probabilities can have an a...
Intelligence analysis is fundamentally an exercise in expert judgment made under conditions of uncer...
Abstract In a recent issue of Earth's Future (vol. 7, pp. 1020–1026), S. C. Lewis et al. (2019, http...
People interpret verbal expressions of probabilities (e.g. 'very likely') in different ways, yet wor...
We address in this work the process of agreement rate analysis for characterizing the level of conse...
We here quantify the qualities of language. Specifically, we derive numerical values, and associated...
People interpret verbal expressions of probabilities (e.g. ‘very likely’) in different ways, yet wor...
Scholars, practitioners, and pundits often leave their assessments of uncertainty vague when debatin...
People interpret verbal expressions of probabilities (e.g. 'very likely') in different ways, yet wor...
Language is a powerful tool and essential for human communication. Despite this criticality, linguis...
Three experiments examined people's ability to incorporate base rate information when judging p...
Probability information is regularly communicated to experts who must fuse multiple estimates to sup...
The way in which information about proportions, amounts, frequencies, probabilities, degrees of conf...
Prior research suggests that humans rationally integrate semantic expectations and the likelihood of...
For 20 different studies, Table 1 tabulates numerical averages of opinions on quantitative meanings ...
Individual variation in the interpretation and application of linguistic probabilities can have an a...
Intelligence analysis is fundamentally an exercise in expert judgment made under conditions of uncer...
Abstract In a recent issue of Earth's Future (vol. 7, pp. 1020–1026), S. C. Lewis et al. (2019, http...
People interpret verbal expressions of probabilities (e.g. 'very likely') in different ways, yet wor...
We address in this work the process of agreement rate analysis for characterizing the level of conse...
We here quantify the qualities of language. Specifically, we derive numerical values, and associated...
People interpret verbal expressions of probabilities (e.g. ‘very likely’) in different ways, yet wor...
Scholars, practitioners, and pundits often leave their assessments of uncertainty vague when debatin...
People interpret verbal expressions of probabilities (e.g. 'very likely') in different ways, yet wor...
Language is a powerful tool and essential for human communication. Despite this criticality, linguis...
Three experiments examined people's ability to incorporate base rate information when judging p...
Probability information is regularly communicated to experts who must fuse multiple estimates to sup...
The way in which information about proportions, amounts, frequencies, probabilities, degrees of conf...
Prior research suggests that humans rationally integrate semantic expectations and the likelihood of...
For 20 different studies, Table 1 tabulates numerical averages of opinions on quantitative meanings ...