Title of article
Adaptive decision processes in perceptual comparisons: Effects of changes in global difficulty context.
Author/Authors
V.، Baranski, Joseph نويسنده , , M.، Petrusic, William نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages
-657
From page
658
To page
0
Abstract
Adaptive decision processes were investigated in experiments involving an unexpected change in the global ease or difficulty of the task. Under accuracy stress, a shift from an easy to a difficult context induced a marked increase in decision time, but a shift from a difficult to an easy context did not. Under speed stress, a shift to a more difficult context induced lower accuracy and rated confidence, depending on the difficulty of the decisions. A view of caution developed in D. Vickersʹs (1979) accumulator theorywhereby one seeks to base decisions on more information--is compared with a view based on slow and fast guessing theory (W. M. Petrusic, 1992; W. M. Petrusic & J. V. Baranski, 1989a)--whereby one seeks to base decisions on more diagnostic information. On balance, the findings support the latter view.
Keywords
blood phobia , script , schema , cognitive biases
Journal title
Journal of Experimental Psychology:Human Perception and Performance
Serial Year
2003
Journal title
Journal of Experimental Psychology:Human Perception and Performance
Record number
93322
Link To Document