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Heuristics and Biases: The Psychology of Intuitive Judgment
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Heuristics and Biases: The Psychology of Intuitive Judgment
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Heuristics and Biases: The Psychology of Intuitive Judgment

US $20.94
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    Item specifics

    Condition
    Very Good: A book that does not look new and has been read but is in excellent condition. No obvious ...
    Release Year
    2002
    Book Title
    Heuristics and Biases: The Psychology of Intuitive Judgment
    ISBN
    9780521796798
    Subject Area
    Education, Psychology
    Publication Name
    Heuristics and Biases : the Psychology of Intuitive Judgment
    Publisher
    Cambridge University Press
    Item Length
    9.1 in
    Subject
    Educational Psychology, General, Cognitive Psychology & Cognition
    Publication Year
    2002
    Type
    Textbook
    Format
    Perfect
    Language
    English
    Item Height
    1.8 in
    Author
    Daniel Kahneman
    Item Weight
    44.1 Oz
    Item Width
    6.3 in
    Number of Pages
    882 Pages

    About this product

    Product Identifiers

    Publisher
    Cambridge University Press
    ISBN-10
    0521796792
    ISBN-13
    9780521796798
    eBay Product ID (ePID)
    1919925

    Product Key Features

    Number of Pages
    882 Pages
    Language
    English
    Publication Name
    Heuristics and Biases : the Psychology of Intuitive Judgment
    Subject
    Educational Psychology, General, Cognitive Psychology & Cognition
    Publication Year
    2002
    Type
    Textbook
    Author
    Daniel Kahneman
    Subject Area
    Education, Psychology
    Format
    Perfect

    Dimensions

    Item Height
    1.8 in
    Item Weight
    44.1 Oz
    Item Length
    9.1 in
    Item Width
    6.3 in

    Additional Product Features

    Intended Audience
    Scholarly & Professional
    LCCN
    2001-037860
    Reviews
    "...the book should serve well as a reference work for researchers in cognitive science and as a textbook for advanced courses in that difficult topic. Philosophers interested in cognitive science will also wish to consult it." Metapsychology Online Review, Heuristics and Biases: The Psychology of Intuitive Judgment; offers a massive, state-of-the-art treatment of the literature, supplementing a similar book published two decades ago...This is an impressive book, full of implications for law and policy." Cass Sunstein, University of Chicago Law School, "Heuristics and Biases: The Psychology of Intuitive Judgment is a scholarly treat, one that is sure to shape the perspectives of another generation of researchers, teachers, and graduate students. The book will serve as a welcome refresher course for some readers and a strong introduction to an important research perspective for others." Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology
    Dewey Edition
    21
    Illustrated
    Yes
    Dewey Decimal
    153.4
    Table Of Content
    Introduction: heuristics and biases then and now; Part I. Theoretical and Empirical Extensions: 1. Extensional versus intuitive reasoning: the conjunction fallacy in probability judgment; 2. Representativeness revisited: attribute substitution in intuitive judgment; 3. How alike is it versus how likely it is: a disjunction fallacy in probability judgments; 4. Imagining can heighten or lower the perceived likelihood of contracting a disease: the mediating effect of ease of imagery; 5. The availability heuristic revisited: ease of recall and content of recall as distinct sources of information; 6. Incorporating the irrelevant: anchors in judgments of belief and value; 7. Putting adjustment back in the anchoring and adjustment heuristic: differential processing of self-generate and experimenter-provided anchors; 8. Self anchoring in conversation: why language users don't do what they 'should'; 9. Inferential correction; 10. Mental contamination and the debiasing problem; 11. Sympathetic magical thinking: the contagion and similarity 'heuristics'; 12. Compatibility effects in judgment and choice; 13. The weighing of evidence and the determinants of confidence; 14. Inside the planning fallacy: the causes and consequences of optimistic time predictions; 15. Probability judgment across cultures; 16. Durability bias in affective forecasting; 17. Resistance of personal risk perceptions to debiasing interventions; 18. Ambiguity and self-evaluation: the role of idiosyncratic trait definitions in self-serving assessments of ability; 19. When predictions fail: the dilemma of unrealistic optimism; 20. Norm theory: comparing reality to its alternatives; 21. Counterfactual thought, regret, and superstition: how to avoid kicking yourself; Part II. New Theoretical Directions: 22. Two systems of reasoning; 23. The affect heuristic; 24. Individual differences in reasoning: implications for the rationality debate?; 25. Support theory: a nonextensional representation of subjective probability; 26. Unpacking, repacking, and anchoring: advances in support theory; 27. Remarks on support theory: recent advances and future directions; 28. The use of statistical heuristics in everyday inductive reasoning; 29. Feelings as information: moods influence judgments and processing strategies; 30. Automated choice heuristics; 31. How good are fast and frugal heuristics?; 32. Intuitive politicians, theologians, and prosecutors: exploring the empirical implications of deviant functionalist metaphors; Part III. Real World Applications: 33. The hot hand in basketball: on the misperception of random sequences; 34. Like goes with like: the role of representativeness in erroneous and pseudoscientific beliefs; 35. When less is more: counterfactual thinking and satisfaction among Olympic medalists; 36. Understanding misunderstanding: social psychological perspectives; 37. Assessing uncertainty in physical constants; 38. Do analysts overreact?; 39. The calibration of expert judgment: Heuristics and biases beyond the laboratory; 40. Clinical versus actuarial judgment; 41. Heuristics and biases in application; 42. Theory driven reasoning about plausible pasts and probable futures in world politics.
    Synopsis
    Is our case strong enough to go to trial? Will interest rates go up? Can I trust this person? Such questions - and the judgments required to answer them - are woven into the fabric of everyday experience. This book, first published in 2002, examines how people make such judgments. The study of human judgment was transformed in the 1970s, when Kahneman and Tversky introduced their 'heuristics and biases' approach and challenged the dominance of strictly rational models. Their work highlighted the reflexive mental operations used to make complex problems manageable and illuminated how the same processes can lead to both accurate and dangerously flawed judgments. The heuristics and biases framework generated a torrent of influential research in psychology - research that reverberated widely and affected scholarship in economics, law, medicine, management, and political science. This book compiles the most influential research in the heuristics and biases tradition since the initial collection of 1982 (by Kahneman, Slovic, and Tversky)., This book compiles psychologists? best attempts to answer important questions about intuitive judgment., Judgment pervades human experience. Do I have a strong enough case to go to trial? Will the Fed change interest rates? Can I trust this person? This book examines how people answer such questions. How do people cope with the complexities of the world economy, the uncertain behavior of friends and adversaries, or their own changing tastes and personalities? When are people's judgments prone to bias, and what is responsible for their biases? This book compiles psychologists' best attempts to answer these important questions., Judgment pervades human experience. When do people make judgments that serve them well, and why are they accurate in these situations? When are people's judgments prone to bias, and what is responsible for their biases? This book, first published in 2002, compiles psychologists' best attempts to answer these important questions.
    LC Classification Number
    BF447.H48 2002

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