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On the Importance of Random Error in the Study of Probability Judgment. Part I: New Theoretical Developments

✍ Scribed by DAVID V. BUDESCU; IDO EREV; THOMAS S. WALLSTEN


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1997
Tongue
English
Weight
221 KB
Volume
10
Category
Article
ISSN
0894-3257

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✦ Synopsis


Erev, Wallsten, and Budescu (1994)

demonstrated that over-and undercon®dence can be observed simultaneously in judgment studies, as a function of the method used to analyze the data. They proposed a general model to account for this apparent paradox, which assumes that overt responses represent true judgments perturbed by random error. To illustrate that the model reproduces the pattern of results, they assumed perfectly calibrated true opinions and a particular form (log-odds plus normally distributed error) of the model to simulate data from the full-range paradigm. In this paper we generalize these results by showing that they can be obtained with other instantiations of the same general model (using the binomial error distribution), and that they apply to the half-range paradigm as well. These results illustrate the robustness and generality of the model. They emphasize the need for new methodological approaches to determine whether observed patterns of over-or undercon®dence represent real eects or are primarily statistical artifacts.


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On the Importance of Random Error in the
✍ DAVID V. BUDESCU; THOMAS S. WALLSTEN; WING TUNG AU 📂 Article 📅 1997 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 247 KB 👁 2 views

Erev, Wallsten, and Budescu (1994) and Budescu, Erev, and Wallsten (1997) demonstrated that over-and undercon®dence often observed in judgment studies may be due, in part, to the presence of random error and its eects on the analysis of the judgments. To illustrate this fact they showed that a ge