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In the context of psychological research, why is the behavior resulting from a cognitive bias described as 'predictable' rather than 'random'?
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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU
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List of biases (and behavioral effects)
Cognitive Misers
Limitations of Intuition
Which of the following best describes the predictable behavioral outcome of relying on mental shortcuts when reasoning under uncertainty?
A researcher notices that participants in a study consistently overestimate the likelihood of dramatic events (such as plane crashes) compared to more common risks (such as car accidents) when asked to judge probabilities from memory. This pattern is best explained as a predictable, systematic error in judgment that arises from relying on mental shortcuts when reasoning under uncertainty.
Match each scenario from a psychological study to the reasoning component it best illustrates based on the relationship between mental shortcuts and systematic errors.
Order the stages to illustrate how the application of mental shortcuts during a reasoning task results in predictable and systematic behavioral outcomes within a psychological study.
Cognitive biases result in behavioral patterns that are random and unpredictable.
In the context of psychological research, why is the behavior resulting from a cognitive bias described as 'predictable' rather than 'random'?
A peer reviewer evaluates a study on human judgment and concludes that the participants' errors were not random noise. Instead, the reviewer determines that the errors followed a systematic and predictable pattern caused by the participants' reliance on mental shortcuts. In this assessment, the reviewer is identifying the presence of a(n) _____.
A research methods instructor presents four scenarios from a study on human judgment. Match each scenario to the cognitive bias it best illustrates.
A student comparing two sources of error in a judgment study notes that random measurement error tends to cancel out across many observations, whereas cognitive-bias-driven error does not cancel out because heuristics push judgments in the _____ direction under similar conditions — making bias a particularly serious threat to research validity that cannot be fixed simply by increasing sample size.
A research team is reviewing whether a study on probability estimation is adequately protected against cognitive bias. Arrange the following evaluative steps in the order that best reflects a rigorous, evidence-based review — from initial analysis of the study context to a final justified verdict on the design's adequacy.
Define cognitive bias in terms of how heuristics and uncertainty interact, and describe the nature of the resulting behavioral outcomes.
Based on the concept of cognitive bias, explain how the participants' reliance on mental shortcuts under uncertainty leads to errors that are categorized as 'predictable biases' rather than random mistakes.
A research team is designing an experiment to measure human judgment under uncertainty. Applying the concept of cognitive bias, how should the team plan to analyze the participants' judgment errors to distinguish cognitive bias from random measurement noise?