When participants in psychophysical experiments are asked to estimate or identify stimuli which differ on a single physical dimension, their judgments are influenced by the local experimental context—the item presented and judgment made on the previous trial. It has been suggested that similar sequential effects occur in more naturalistic, real-world judgments. In three experiments we asked participants to judge the prices of a sequence of items. In Experiment 1, judgments were biased towards the previous response (assimilation) but away from the true value of the previous item (contrast), a pattern which matches that found in psychophysical research. In Experiments 2A and 2B, we manipulated the provision of feedback and the expertise...
© 2020 William Francis TurnerTo navigate the world safely, it is critical that we are able to rapidl...
This is a post-peer-review, pre-copyedit version of an article published in Attention, Perception, &...
In a series of experiments, Kusev et al. (Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and P...
When participants in psychophysical experiments are asked to estimate or identify stimuli which diff...
When people make decisions about sequentially presented items in psychophysical experiments, their d...
This paper presents two experiments exploring context effects on human judgment and testing JUDGEMAP...
Contrast effects in consumers ' judgments of products can stem from changes in how consumers me...
Previous research has demonstrated clearly the influence of expectations on judgments of covariation...
People often make quantitative predictions (e.g., college GPA) on the basis of contradictory cues (e...
INTRODUCTION: Basic to the judging process is the relating of a given item to a group of items* The...
In a series of experiments, Kusev et al. (Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and P...
Theories of absolute identification and categorization established over past decades have revealed p...
Four experiments study relative frequency judgment and recall of sequentially presented items drawn ...
Humans' judgment of relative-frequency, similar to their use of probability in decision-making, is o...
International audienceA number of theories have been proposed to explain in precise mathematical ter...
© 2020 William Francis TurnerTo navigate the world safely, it is critical that we are able to rapidl...
This is a post-peer-review, pre-copyedit version of an article published in Attention, Perception, &...
In a series of experiments, Kusev et al. (Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and P...
When participants in psychophysical experiments are asked to estimate or identify stimuli which diff...
When people make decisions about sequentially presented items in psychophysical experiments, their d...
This paper presents two experiments exploring context effects on human judgment and testing JUDGEMAP...
Contrast effects in consumers ' judgments of products can stem from changes in how consumers me...
Previous research has demonstrated clearly the influence of expectations on judgments of covariation...
People often make quantitative predictions (e.g., college GPA) on the basis of contradictory cues (e...
INTRODUCTION: Basic to the judging process is the relating of a given item to a group of items* The...
In a series of experiments, Kusev et al. (Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and P...
Theories of absolute identification and categorization established over past decades have revealed p...
Four experiments study relative frequency judgment and recall of sequentially presented items drawn ...
Humans' judgment of relative-frequency, similar to their use of probability in decision-making, is o...
International audienceA number of theories have been proposed to explain in precise mathematical ter...
© 2020 William Francis TurnerTo navigate the world safely, it is critical that we are able to rapidl...
This is a post-peer-review, pre-copyedit version of an article published in Attention, Perception, &...
In a series of experiments, Kusev et al. (Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and P...