Strategy changes in human contingency judgments as a function of contingency tables. |
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Authors: | T Shimazaki Y Tsuda H Imada |
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Affiliation: | Department of Behavioral Science, Hokkaido University, Japan. |
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Abstract: | Judgment strategies of 169 undergraduate students on problems to judge the contingency between two binary events were identified by the method of rule-based analysis to clarify whether or not the strategies the subjects used would be affected by the concrete nature of the contingency table. Problems were constructed along two factors: total cell frequency and width of range of objective contingencies. Although the factor of total cell frequency had no effect on subjects' strategies, the number of subjects who changed strategies corresponding with problem instances increased when the objective contingencies were set closer to zero or when problems became more difficult. These results are discussed in the context of previous studies of this issue in the literature. |
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