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Biased judgments of the effects of speed change on travel time,fuel consumption and braking: Individual differences in the use of simplifying rules producing the same biases
Affiliation:1. Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN, United States;2. Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Department of Psychology, Norway;1. Sapir Academic College, Israel;2. Ariel University, Israel;1. Graduate Center for Gerontology, Department of Health, Behavior & Society, College of Public Health, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY 40536, United States;2. Center for Injury Research and Policy, Abigail Wexner Research Institute at Nationwide Children’s Hospital, Columbus, OH 43205, United States;3. Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, West Virginia University, Morgantown, WV 26506, United States;4. Center for Injury Research and Policy, Abigail Wexner Research Institute at Nationwide Children’s Hospital, Columbus, OH 43205, United States;1. National Technical University of Athens, Department of Transportation Planning and Engineering, 5 Iroon Polytechniou St., GR-15773 Athens, Greece;2. Department of Civil, Geo and Environmental Engineering, Technical University of Munich, Munich 80333, Germany
Abstract:The main purpose of this study was to identify different cognitive rules that lead to a particular judgment bias. To fulfill this purpose, a new method Spectral analysis was introduced and applied. Participants judged time saved by driving faster, fuel saved by replacing a car and braking capacity at different speeds. These problems invite the time saving bias (e.g., time saved from speed increases at higher speeds overestimated), the miles per gallon, MPG illusion (misjudgment of fuel saved by replacing a car) and the braking capacity bias (overestimation of braking capacity after speed increase). The average results replicated the biases. Spectral analysis of individual participants and problems showed that a speed difference rule explained about half of the time saving judgments and about three fourth of the MPG judgments. A difference between speeds rule described about one third of the biased braking judgments and a ratio/proportion rule about one fifth of the time saving and MPG judgments. All rules give biased judgments in all three domains. The paper ends with a discussion of hierarchies of cognitive rules, applications of the results, and how to mitigate or avoid the biases and the risks associated with the biases.
Keywords:Time saving bias  The MPG illusion  Braking  Spectral analysis  Judgment rules
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