A common view in current psychology is that people estimate probabilities using various 'heuristics' or rules of thumb that do not follow the normative rules of probability theory. We present a model where people estimate conditional probabilities such as P(A|B) (the probability of A given that B has occurred) by a process that follows standard frequentist probability theory but is subject to random noise. This model accounts for various results from previous studies of conditional probability judgment. This model predicts that people's conditional probability judgments will agree with a series of fundamental identities in probability theory whose form cancels the effect of noise, while deviating from probability theory in other expression...
The elicitation of uncertainty is a topic of interest in a range of disciplines. The conversion of e...
The authors report 3 experiments in which participants were invited to judge the probability of sta...
This review addresses the long-standing puzzle of how logic and probability fit together in human re...
We describe a computational model of two central aspects of people’s probabilistic reasoning: descr...
We describe 4 experiments testing contrasting predictions of two recent models of probability judgme...
We describe 4 experiments testing contrasting predictions of two recent models of probability judgme...
This paper addresses the apparent mismatch between the normative and descriptive literatures in the ...
Probability judgment is a vital part of many aspects of everyday life. In the present paper, we pres...
Probability judgement is a vital part of many aspects of everyday life. In the present paper, we pre...
Research into the cognition of conditionals has predominantly focused on conditional reasoning, prod...
Presents a new theory of subjective probability according to which different descriptions of the sam...
The authors report 3 experiments in which participants were invited to judge the probability of stat...
In this article we demonstrate how algorithmic probability theory is applied to situations that inv...
A number of recent theories have suggested that the various systematic biases and fallacies seen in ...
The two main psychological theories of the ordinary conditional were designed to account for inferen...
The elicitation of uncertainty is a topic of interest in a range of disciplines. The conversion of e...
The authors report 3 experiments in which participants were invited to judge the probability of sta...
This review addresses the long-standing puzzle of how logic and probability fit together in human re...
We describe a computational model of two central aspects of people’s probabilistic reasoning: descr...
We describe 4 experiments testing contrasting predictions of two recent models of probability judgme...
We describe 4 experiments testing contrasting predictions of two recent models of probability judgme...
This paper addresses the apparent mismatch between the normative and descriptive literatures in the ...
Probability judgment is a vital part of many aspects of everyday life. In the present paper, we pres...
Probability judgement is a vital part of many aspects of everyday life. In the present paper, we pre...
Research into the cognition of conditionals has predominantly focused on conditional reasoning, prod...
Presents a new theory of subjective probability according to which different descriptions of the sam...
The authors report 3 experiments in which participants were invited to judge the probability of stat...
In this article we demonstrate how algorithmic probability theory is applied to situations that inv...
A number of recent theories have suggested that the various systematic biases and fallacies seen in ...
The two main psychological theories of the ordinary conditional were designed to account for inferen...
The elicitation of uncertainty is a topic of interest in a range of disciplines. The conversion of e...
The authors report 3 experiments in which participants were invited to judge the probability of sta...
This review addresses the long-standing puzzle of how logic and probability fit together in human re...