Exemplars in the mist: The cognitive substrate of the representativeness heuristic (2008)
Authors
Abstract
The idea that people often make probability judgments by a heuristic short-cut, the representativeness heuristic, has been widely influential, but also criticized for being vague. The empirical trademark of the heuristic is characteristic deviations between normative probabilities and judgments (e.g., the conjunction fallacy, base-rate neglect). In this article the authors contrast two hypotheses concerning the cognitive substrate of the representativeness heuristic, the prototype hypothesis (Kahneman & Frederick, 2002) and the exemplar hypothesis (Juslin & Persson, 2002), in a task especially designed to elicit representativeness effects. Computational modelling and an experiment reveal that representativeness effects are evident early in training and persist longer in a more complex task environment and that the data are best accounted for by a model implementing the exemplar hypothesis.
Bibliographic entry
Nilsson, H., Juslin, P., & Olsson, H. (2008). Exemplars in the mist: The cognitive substrate of the representativeness heuristic. Scandinavian Journal of Psychology, 49, 201-212.
Miscellaneous
Publication year | 2008 | |
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Document type: | Article | |
Publication status: | Published | |
External URL: | ||
Categories: | Environment StructureProbability | |
Keywords: | category learningcognitive modelingexemplar memoryprototyperepresentativeness heuristicsubjective probability |