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Heuristics and biases in mental arithmetic: revisiting and reversing operational momentum
Authors:Samuel Shaki  Michal Pinhas  Martin H. Fischer
Affiliation:1. Department of Behavioral Sciences, Ariel University, Ariel, IsraelSamuel_shaki@hotmail.com samuelsh@ariel.ac.il;3. Department of Behavioral Sciences, Ariel University, Ariel, Israel;4. Division of Cognitive Science, University of Potsdam, Potsdam, Germany
Abstract:ABSTRACT

Mental arithmetic is characterised by a tendency to overestimate addition and to underestimate subtraction results: the operational momentum (OM) effect. Here, motivated by contentious explanations of this effect, we developed and tested an arithmetic heuristics and biases model that predicts reverse OM due to cognitive anchoring effects. Participants produced bi-directional lines with lengths corresponding to the results of arithmetic problems. In two experiments, we found regular OM with zero problems (e.g., 3+0, 3?0) but reverse OM with non-zero problems (e.g., 2+1, 4?1). In a third experiment, we tested the prediction of our model. Our results suggest the presence of at least three competing biases in mental arithmetic: a more-or-less heuristic, a sign-space association and an anchoring bias. We conclude that mental arithmetic exhibits shortcuts for decision-making similar to traditional domains of reasoning and problem-solving.
Keywords:Heuristics  mental arithmetic  mental number line  operational momentum  problem-solving
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