We analyze how people form evaluative judgments about categories based on their experiences with category members. Prior research suggests that such evaluative judgments depend on some experience average, but is unclear about the specific kind of average. We hypothesized that evaluations of categories could be driven either by the ‘simple average’ of experiences with the category or by the ‘member average’ (the average of the evaluations of the category members, where the evaluation of a category member is the average of experiences with this particular member). Understanding whether evaluations of categories are driven by the ‘simple average’ or the ‘member average’ is important in settings where people obtain unbalanced numbers of observa...
This paper offers a theoretical framework on the contingencies that may shape the use and effectiven...
Item does not contain fulltextPURPOSE: Social judgment research suggests that rater unreliability in...
Redundant or excessive information can sometimes lead people to lean on it unnecessarily. Certain ex...
[eng] We analyze how people form evaluative judgments about categories based on their experiences wi...
In this thesis I explore how people form and are affected by judgments about objects, people, and c...
The three chapters of this thesis explore how previous experience and mental categories shape human...
In a series of experiments, Kusev et al. (Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and P...
In a series of experiments, Kusev et al. (Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and P...
The “Peak–End rule” which averages only the most extreme (Peak) and the final (End) impressions, is ...
The availability heuristic occurs when we make judgements based on our previous knowledge and experi...
In this paper we argue against averaging as a common practice in the analysis of subjective attribut...
Huttenlocher, Hedges, and Vevea (2000) (Why do categories affect stimulus judgment? Journal of Exper...
The average probability estimate of J> 1 judges is generally better than its components. Two stud...
Three experiments tested the hypothesis that judgments about a group formed by two paired categories...
Four experiments study relative frequency judgment and recall of sequentially presented items drawn ...
This paper offers a theoretical framework on the contingencies that may shape the use and effectiven...
Item does not contain fulltextPURPOSE: Social judgment research suggests that rater unreliability in...
Redundant or excessive information can sometimes lead people to lean on it unnecessarily. Certain ex...
[eng] We analyze how people form evaluative judgments about categories based on their experiences wi...
In this thesis I explore how people form and are affected by judgments about objects, people, and c...
The three chapters of this thesis explore how previous experience and mental categories shape human...
In a series of experiments, Kusev et al. (Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and P...
In a series of experiments, Kusev et al. (Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and P...
The “Peak–End rule” which averages only the most extreme (Peak) and the final (End) impressions, is ...
The availability heuristic occurs when we make judgements based on our previous knowledge and experi...
In this paper we argue against averaging as a common practice in the analysis of subjective attribut...
Huttenlocher, Hedges, and Vevea (2000) (Why do categories affect stimulus judgment? Journal of Exper...
The average probability estimate of J> 1 judges is generally better than its components. Two stud...
Three experiments tested the hypothesis that judgments about a group formed by two paired categories...
Four experiments study relative frequency judgment and recall of sequentially presented items drawn ...
This paper offers a theoretical framework on the contingencies that may shape the use and effectiven...
Item does not contain fulltextPURPOSE: Social judgment research suggests that rater unreliability in...
Redundant or excessive information can sometimes lead people to lean on it unnecessarily. Certain ex...