Development and Application of a Model of Individual Decision Making.

Abstract

The major purposes of our grant were: (a) to develop a psychological model of human reasoning in situations in which people are told some facts and then have to assign probabilities to generalizations of these facts; and (b) to use this model to develop "reasoning prosthetics," i.e., automated procedures that enable an individual reasoner to increase the accuracy of his or her probability judgments while remaining faithful to one's core intuitions. With respect to our first goal, we developed and tested the Gap model, which assumes that people's probability judgements about a domain are mainly based on their perceived similarity relations among objects in the domain, and on their intuitions about the plausibility of object-predicate relations in the domain. Quantitative versions of the Gap model were shown to do an adequate job of predicting people's probability judgments. With respect to our second goal, we have developed a number of reasoning prosthetics, each of which can reliability predict people's actual probability judgments, and in some cases more accurately match the true probabilities than can people's judgments. Other topics in reasoning and probability judgments were also studied.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Mar 10, 1995
Accession Number
ADA296500

Entities

People

  • Edward E. Smith

Organizations

  • University of Michigan

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Human Systems

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Accuracy
  • Cognition
  • Cognitive Science
  • Judgment
  • Probability
  • Probability Distributions
  • Prosthetics
  • Psychology
  • Reasoning
  • Synthetic Fibers
  • Test And Evaluation
  • Thinking

Fields of Study

  • Psychology

Readers

  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Computational Modeling and Simulation
  • Regression Analysis.