Artigo em revista científica Q1
What's next? Disentangling availability from representativeness using binary decision tasks
João N. Braga (Braga, J. N. ); Mário B. Ferreira (Ferreira, M. B. ); Steven J. Sherman (Sherman, S. J.); André Mata (Mata, A.); Sofia Jacinto (Jacinto, S.); Marina Ferreira (Ferreira, M.);
Título Revista
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Ano (publicação definitiva)
2018
Língua
Inglês
País
Estados Unidos da América
Mais Informação
Web of Science®

N.º de citações: 10

(Última verificação: 2024-05-09 21:22)

Ver o registo na Web of Science®


: 0.5
Scopus

N.º de citações: 8

(Última verificação: 2024-05-04 14:20)

Ver o registo na Scopus


: 0.4
Google Scholar

N.º de citações: 13

(Última verificação: 2024-05-09 10:48)

Ver o registo no Google Scholar

Abstract/Resumo
People's intuitive predictions under uncertainty may rely on the representativeness or on the availability heuristics (Tversky & Kahneman, 1974). However, the distinction between these two heuristics has never been clear, and both have been proposed to underlie the same judgment tasks. For instance, when judging what outcome is likely to be next in a coin flip after a streak, representativeness leads to predicting an alternation in the outcome, ending the streak (gambler's fallacy), whereas availability leads to predicting the streak's continuation. We propose that availability (direct use of accessibility) is computed earlier than representativeness (comparing to an abstract representation of the expected outcome). In five studies, we pit one heuristic against the other in binary prediction tasks, both in coin flip and athlete's performance contexts. We find that, although the streak outcome is cognitively more available, judgments are usually based on representativeness, leading more often to a prediction of an alternation after a streak. However, under time-pressure conditions, representativeness processes are constrained and participants are more prone to base their predictions on the most salient and cognitively available outcomes.
Agradecimentos/Acknowledgements
--
Palavras-chave
Decision heuristics,Availability,Representativeness,Binary decision,Gambler's fallacy
  • Psicologia - Ciências Sociais
  • Sociologia - Ciências Sociais
Registos de financiamentos
Referência de financiamento Entidade Financiadora
SFRH/BD/73378/2010 Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia
SFRH/BPD/122028/2016 Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia