Deck 11: Decisions, Judgments, and Reasoning

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Question
A three-statement logical form is called __________.

A)incomplete
B)modus ponens
C)valid
D)a syllogism
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Question
Consider this problem.What does it represent? If it is a weekend,Mark is sailing.
Mark is sailing.
Thus,it is a weekend.

A)valid syllogistic reasoning problem
B)invalid syllogistic reasoning problem
C)valid conditional reasoning problem
D)invalid conditional reasoning problem
Question
Consider this problem.What does it represent? Premise 1: If Mark drew it,it is a duck.
Premise 2: Mark drew it.
Conclusion: It is a duck.

A)conditional reasoning
B)affirm the antecedent
C)valid inference
D)all of the above
Question
<strong>  Consider this problem.What does it represent?</strong> A)logically valid syllogism B)invalid syllogism C)confirm the antecedent D)illicit conversion <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Consider this problem.What does it represent?

A)logically valid syllogism
B)invalid syllogism
C)confirm the antecedent
D)illicit conversion
Question
In reasoning,the tendency to search for evidence that confirms a conclusion is __________.

A)confirmation bias
B)the search for positive evidence
C)a major source of human error in decision making
D)all of the above
Question
Which of the following is a search error?

A)confirmation bias
B)deny the antecedent
C)affirm the consequent
D)misattribution
Question
A syllogism is __________.

A)a logical truth
B)only applicable to abstract problems
C)a three-statement logical form
D)an ancient,but flawed system
Question
?Form errors in reasoning occur because __________.

A)logical reasoning forms don't take into account the real world
B)people don't use proper logic notation
C)euler circles have been shown to be false
D)people use invalid logical forms,such as affirming the consequent
Question
Which is TRUE?

A)In general,research evidence indicates that people tend to act as logically rational decision makers.
B)Denying the consequent leads to a valid inference.
C)Affirming the antecedent does not lead to a valid inference.
D)In conditional reasoning,an illicit conversion is best described as a network error.
Question
In reasoning,the tendency to search for evidence that confirms a conclusion is called __________.

A)confirmation bias
B)insight
C)counterfactual reasoning
D)availability heuristic
Question
What is a belief bias in reasoning?

A)mistakes in reasoning based on beliefs about how reasoning works
B)misplaced belief in logical forms
C)drawing conclusions based on one's prior beliefs
D)failure to see the reasons behind other people's beliefs
Question
Which is NOT true?

A)If a conclusion matches the first mental model derived from the problem,it is particularly easy (and thus likely)to accept the (potentially false)conclusion,leading to fallacies or errors in reasoning.
B)In statistics,we test against the null hypothesis in hopes that our evidence will be inconsistent with the predicted "no effect" outcome.
C)When hypothesis testing with increasingly complex if-then relations,the typical mistake is to search for positive,confirming evidence.
D)The strongest logical test of a scientific theory is to see if the hypothesized effects are produced in accordance with the theoretical predictions.
Question
Which is the most likely error in scientific hypothesis testing?

A)confirmation bias
B)modus ponens
C)modus tollens
D)anchoring and adjustment heuristic
Question
Johnston-Laird reports that people's performance on the Wason card task can be greatly improved by __________.

A)using Venn diagrams
B)seeking disconfirmation
C)making the situation concrete
D)casting a more appropriate frame via headers
Question
The search for positive evidence only is labeled the __________.

A)confirmation bias
B)Pollyanna effect
C)overconfidence error
D)anti-negativity tendency
Question
Which does NOT reflect valid conditional reasoning?

A)deny the antecedent
B)modus tollens
C)modus ponens
D)deny the consequent
Question
__________ is(are)defined as "mental representations of meanings of the terms in reasoning problems."

A)Formal logic
B)Venn diagrams
C)Mental models
D)Semantic networks
Question
Johnson-Laird argued that __________.

A)Humans cannot use formal logic
B)Humans use mental models of the described state of affairs
C)Human decision making is intrinsically connected to language skills
D)Human decision making relies on explicit hypothesis testing
Question
__________ is the study of the relationship between physical stimuli and the perceived characteristics of those stimuli: the study of how perceptual experience differs from the physical stimulation being perceived.

A)Simulation heurisitc
B)Naïve physics
C)JND
D)Psychophysics
Question
Consider this problem.What does it represent? Premise 1: If it is a weekend,Mark is sailing.
Premise 2: Mark is sailing.
Conclusion: It is a weekend.

A)syllogistic reasoning
B)affirm the antecedent
C)illicit conversion
D)deny the antecedent
Question
Making judgments about which is smaller-a "1" or a "2" versus a "1" or a "4"-will illustrate __________.

A)the symbolic congruity effect
B)the Stroop effect
C)the imagery effect
D)the symbolic distance effect
Question
There are two hospitals; one averages 45 births per day,the other 15 births per day.You are asked,"In any given year,which hospital will have a higher percentage of days during which more than 60 percent of the babies born will be male?" The correct answer is __________.

A)the "45" hospital
B)the "15" hospital
C)that there is an equal chance of either
D)that there is insufficient information provided (thus,we cannot answer the question)
Question
Asking a subject to judge which set of clock hands produces a larger angle-"3:20 or 7:25" and then "2:15 or 9:20"-produces all but __________.

A)symbolic distance effect
B)evidence for the use of visual imagery
C)the semantic congruity effect
D)slower response times for "3:20 vs.7:25" than for "2:15 vs.9:20"
Question
Kahneman & Tversky (1973)report having people read various personality descriptions and then estimate the likelihood or probability that a person was a member of one or another profession.To a surprising degree,people's estimates are influenced by the similarity of the description to a widely held stereotype.This reflects __________.

A)the availability heuristic
B)general world knowledge
C)the vividness effect
D)the representativeness heuristic
Question
The amount of change required for people to detect the change is __________.

A)JND
B)Weber's constant
C)Helmholtz's equation
D)Fechner's phallia
Question
A heuristic is __________.

A)a specific rule or solution procedure that is certain to yield the correct answer if followed correctly
B)an informal "rule of thumb" method for solving problems,not necessarily guaranteed to solve the problem correctly,but usually much faster or more tractable than other alternatives
C)the act of someone who reasons; to think logically; to analyze with reason
D)the mental representation of meaning in a reasoning problem
Question
Decisions about size differences are sped up when the stimuli differ by a greater amount.This reflects __________.

A)JND
B)distance effect
C)discriminability index
D)spatial cueing
Question
An algorithm is __________.

A)a specific rule or solution procedure that is certain to yield the correct answer if followed correctly
B)an informal "rule of thumb" method for solving problems,not necessarily guaranteed to solve the problem correctly,but usually much faster or more tractable than other alternatives
C)the act of someone who reasons; to think logically; to analyze with reason
D)the mental representation of meaning in a reasoning problem
Question
In the __________,knowledge from a variety of sources is factored into a decision (e.g.,Chicago judged north of Rome based on "Northern North America" vs."Southern Europe").

A)symbolic distance effect
B)semantic imagery effect
C)semantic congruity effect
D)plausible reasoning hypothesis
Question
A heuristic is to __________ as an algorithm is to __________.

A)correct; incorrect
B)incorrect; correct
C)likelihood; certainty
D)certainty; likelihood
Question
Make a judgment about which is rounder: an apple or a pear versus a toothpick or an oar.The difference between these judgments will illustrate __________.

A)the semantic congruity effect
B)the von Restorff effect
C)the imagery effect
D)the recency effect
Question
Consider this pair of judgments about which is smaller: "Which is smaller,a sheep or a bear?" and "Which is smaller,a mouse or a rat?" The faster response to the second question illustrates __________.

A)the semantic congruity effect
B)the imagery effect
C)the number magnitude effect
D)the symbolic distance effect
Question
Consider the following problem and then choose which of the statements below is NOT true. If each of 10 people at a meeting shakes hands (once)with every other person,how many handshakes are exchanged?

A)The descriptive model might be "Ten people shaking hands with nine folks each… a couple fewer because you want to avoid repetitions ...say something like maybe sixty to seventy?"
B)The normative method will yield the "correct" answer: in this case,N x ((N-1)/2).
C)A heuristic approach is not necessarily systematic or orderly,instead relying on educated guessing.
D)The algorithmic approach will differ substantially from the normative model of what is "right"; that is,it is particularly prone to distortions,inaccuracies,and omissions.
Question
RT is longer for the comparison "a whale is a fish" than for "a whale is a bird." This reflects __________.

A)the semantic congruity effect
B)the Stroop effect
C)the imagery effect
D)the symbolic distance effect
Question
A reasoning heuristic in which we judge the likelihood of some event by deciding how much that event seems to be like the larger group or population from which it was drawn is a(n)__________.

A)association heuristic
B)availability heuristic
C)normative heuristic
D)representativeness heuristic
Question
Using this picture and asking "Which {balloon // yo-yo} is higher" (the example from the text)will illustrate __________. <strong>Using this picture and asking Which {balloon // yo-yo} is higher (the example from the text)will illustrate __________.  </strong> A)the symbolic distance effect B)the semantic congruity effect C)the fact that decisions about size differences are sped up when the stimuli differ by a greater amount D)the magnitude effect <div style=padding-top: 35px>

A)the symbolic distance effect
B)the semantic congruity effect
C)the fact that decisions about size differences are sped up when the stimuli differ by a greater amount
D)the magnitude effect
Question
Which is NOT true of judgments of number magnitude?

A)The larger the difference between the digits,the faster the judgments are made.
B)Just as in psychophysics,the psychological difference is a direct function of physical difference.
C)Judgment time is affected by semantic congruity.
D)When people make mental comparisons and judgments of purely symbolic quantities,there is a pronounced semantic distance effect.
Question
The belief that small samples will be representative of the population from which they are selected is __________.

A)the law of large numbers
B)the central limit theorem
C)the fallacy law of small numbers
D)called sensitivity to sample size
Question
The bias or heuristic that includes the law of small numbers is __________.

A) veracity bias
B) availability heuristic
C) representativeness heuristic
D) confirmation bias
Question
The representativeness heuristic is a bias to make decisions based on __________.

A)how closely one outcome resembles the population of possible outcomes
B)whether an option is represented in the set of possible outcomes
C)how well one can represent the choice to other people
D)the degree to which a choice represents a correct answer
Question
When we alter an unusual story element,substituting a more typical or normal element in its place,we refer to this as reflecting __________.

A)the simulation heuristic
B)downhill change
C)uphill change
D)the familiarity bias
Question
Which of the following represented a "belief" effect?

A)Clinical psychologists deviate from the DSM-IV based on their personal views of cause-effect relations.
B)Israeli students tend to judge simultaneous events in history from Europe as occurring before the matched event in North America.
C)the confirmation bias
D)all of the above
Question
In the three months following the 9/11 attack on the World Trade Center buildings in New York City,the rate of traffic fatalities increased by about 350 people.This increase was most likely due to the operation of __________.

A)the effect of sample size
B)the familiarity bias
C)the salience bias
D)the representativeness heuristic
Question
When doing counterfactual thinking,what kind of change is the easiest to imagine and then base decisions upon?

A)uphill
B)downhill
C)transverse
D)inverted
Question
__________ is a decision-making strategy based on the ease of retrieval from memory.

A)Representativeness heuristic
B)Retrieval effect
C)Availability heuristic
D)Algorithm
Question
Sometimes people make decision-making errors because of limited __________.

A)heuristics
B)domain knowledge
C)algorithms
D)imagination
Question
The mistaken belief that a compound outcome of two characteristics can be more likely than either one of the characteristics by itself is __________.

A)the conjunction fallacy
B)the compound bias
C)the law of small numbers error
D)satisficing
Question
If you make a decision about what most households in the country are like by thinking about what your college friends are like,you are succumbing to the __________ heuristic.

A)representativeness
B)retrieval
C)availability
D)belief bias
Question
The simulation heuristic involves __________.

A)running a computer simulation of human cognitive decision making
B)imagining the outcome of your own actions
C)making a model of the event to help your decision making
D)imaging other possible outcomes of an event
Question
Judging events as more frequent or important just because they are more familiar in memory illustrates __________.

A)familiarity bias
B)salience bias
C)vividness bias
D)the effect of general world knowledge
Question
Two groups of participants read identical stories that differed in their endings: meeting a new person and having the story end in a marriage proposal,a rape scenario,or,as a control,a neutral ending (Carli,1999).People __________.

A)showed no difference in the accuracy of their recall for story elements
B)in both experimental groups reported "being able to predict" how the story would end
C)in both experimental groups illustrated undoing effects
D)showed evidence for semantic congruency effects in recall
Question
The anchoring and adjustment effect most likely reflects the __________.

A)representativeness heuristic
B)scope ratio
C)availability heuristic
D)simulation heuristic
Question
Making a decision based on ease of retrieval of relevant examples from memory (e.g.,the "words with K in the first/third position" example)is __________.This is an informal approach that can be extremely useful in many situations,but it sometimes produces the wrong answer.

A)representativeness heuristic
B)Bayes' theorem
C)availability heuristic
D)all of the above
Question
A German sample was better at (correctly)identifying that San Diego was more populous than San Antonio than a U.S.sample.This result is best described as reflecting __________.

A)the chronic underfunding of the U.S.educational system
B)the recognition heuristic
C)the frequency heuristic
D)the simulation heuristic
Question
Stereotypes are a reflection,in part,of the __________ heuristic.

A)availability
B)representativeness
C)belief bias
D)prejudice
Question
The argument that there is a central flaw in heuristics and bias research-that it is a mistake to assume that the correct answer to any decision-making problem must be the normative answer supplied by classic probability theory-is __________.

A)counterfactual thinking
B)inductive rationalization
C)adaptive thinking
D)recognition heuristic
Question
__________ is(are)defined as people's misconceptions of the physical world,in particular their understanding of the principles of motion.

A)Simulation heuristic
B)Mental models
C)Naïve physics
D)Self-conceptualization of beliefs
Question
Recent research suggests that what sort of reasoning might be influencing how people make decisions?

A)political
B)religious
C)temporal
D)causal
Question
Kahneman & Tversky (1973)report having people read various personality descriptions and then estimate the likelihood or probability that a person was a member of one or another profession.They report __________.

A)good use of prior odds in the "bare bones" situation
B)that stereotypic information biased the reported likelihood in the direction of the stereotype
C)that worthless information did not bias the reported likelihood; prior probabilities were retained unless the information was consistent with a stereotype
D)that the descriptive model deviated strongly from the normative model
Question
In terms of undoing,which is most involved?

A)tending to maintain properties of the main object or focus of the story unless a different focus is provided
B)satisficing
C)the law of small numbers
D)counterfactual thinking driven by availability and frequency effects
Question
If a conclusion matches the first mental model derived from the problem,it is particularly easy (and thus likely)to accept the (potentially false)conclusion,leading to fallacies or errors in reasoning.
Question
The strongest logical test of a scientific theory is to see if the hypothesized effects are produced in accordance with the theoretical predictions.
Question
Denying the consequent leads to a valid inference.
Question
The difference in "guestimate" answers for 8x7x6x5x4x3x2x1 versus 1x2x3x4x5x6x7x8 reveals __________.

A)the prototypicality heuristic
B)the simulation heuristic
C)the availability heuristic
D)the recognition heuristic
Question
In judgments of "bigness," "8 vs.12" will be judged more quickly than "8 vs.9."
Question
The subjective experience of magnitude is a direct function of the amount of physical stimulation.
Question
The "roadrunner effect" (dropping off a cliff)reflects __________.

A)naïve physics
B)ambiguity
C)counterfactual reasoning
D)downhill change
Question
Geography questions can show semantic congruity and symbolic distance effects.
Question
In general,research evidence indicates that people act as rational decision makers.
Question
Affirming the antecedent does not lead to a valid inference.
Question
In conditional reasoning,the confirmation bias is a search error.
Question
In conditional reasoning,an illicit conversion is a form error.
Question
In statistics,we test against the null hypothesis in hopes that our evidence will be inconsistent with the predicted "no effect" outcome.
Question
When hypothesis testing with increasingly complex if-then relations,the typical mistake is to search for positive,confirming evidence.
Question
Adults often will not demonstrate formal or abstract reasoning processes when presented with abstract problems.
Question
The psychological distance between small numbers is compressed relative to the psychological difference between large numbers.)
Question
Naïve physics refers to __________.

A)errors in physical reasoning
B)early learning of physical principles
C)counterfactual reasoning
D)our implicit understanding of the physical world
Question
It is incorrect to think of human decision making as a search for evidence.
Question
Using concrete rather than abstract concepts tends to improve reasoning accuracy.
Question
Mental models exist only for concrete systems.
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Deck 11: Decisions, Judgments, and Reasoning
1
A three-statement logical form is called __________.

A)incomplete
B)modus ponens
C)valid
D)a syllogism
D
2
Consider this problem.What does it represent? If it is a weekend,Mark is sailing.
Mark is sailing.
Thus,it is a weekend.

A)valid syllogistic reasoning problem
B)invalid syllogistic reasoning problem
C)valid conditional reasoning problem
D)invalid conditional reasoning problem
C
3
Consider this problem.What does it represent? Premise 1: If Mark drew it,it is a duck.
Premise 2: Mark drew it.
Conclusion: It is a duck.

A)conditional reasoning
B)affirm the antecedent
C)valid inference
D)all of the above
D
4
<strong>  Consider this problem.What does it represent?</strong> A)logically valid syllogism B)invalid syllogism C)confirm the antecedent D)illicit conversion
Consider this problem.What does it represent?

A)logically valid syllogism
B)invalid syllogism
C)confirm the antecedent
D)illicit conversion
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k this deck
5
In reasoning,the tendency to search for evidence that confirms a conclusion is __________.

A)confirmation bias
B)the search for positive evidence
C)a major source of human error in decision making
D)all of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Which of the following is a search error?

A)confirmation bias
B)deny the antecedent
C)affirm the consequent
D)misattribution
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
A syllogism is __________.

A)a logical truth
B)only applicable to abstract problems
C)a three-statement logical form
D)an ancient,but flawed system
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
?Form errors in reasoning occur because __________.

A)logical reasoning forms don't take into account the real world
B)people don't use proper logic notation
C)euler circles have been shown to be false
D)people use invalid logical forms,such as affirming the consequent
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Which is TRUE?

A)In general,research evidence indicates that people tend to act as logically rational decision makers.
B)Denying the consequent leads to a valid inference.
C)Affirming the antecedent does not lead to a valid inference.
D)In conditional reasoning,an illicit conversion is best described as a network error.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
In reasoning,the tendency to search for evidence that confirms a conclusion is called __________.

A)confirmation bias
B)insight
C)counterfactual reasoning
D)availability heuristic
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
What is a belief bias in reasoning?

A)mistakes in reasoning based on beliefs about how reasoning works
B)misplaced belief in logical forms
C)drawing conclusions based on one's prior beliefs
D)failure to see the reasons behind other people's beliefs
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Which is NOT true?

A)If a conclusion matches the first mental model derived from the problem,it is particularly easy (and thus likely)to accept the (potentially false)conclusion,leading to fallacies or errors in reasoning.
B)In statistics,we test against the null hypothesis in hopes that our evidence will be inconsistent with the predicted "no effect" outcome.
C)When hypothesis testing with increasingly complex if-then relations,the typical mistake is to search for positive,confirming evidence.
D)The strongest logical test of a scientific theory is to see if the hypothesized effects are produced in accordance with the theoretical predictions.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Which is the most likely error in scientific hypothesis testing?

A)confirmation bias
B)modus ponens
C)modus tollens
D)anchoring and adjustment heuristic
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
Johnston-Laird reports that people's performance on the Wason card task can be greatly improved by __________.

A)using Venn diagrams
B)seeking disconfirmation
C)making the situation concrete
D)casting a more appropriate frame via headers
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
The search for positive evidence only is labeled the __________.

A)confirmation bias
B)Pollyanna effect
C)overconfidence error
D)anti-negativity tendency
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Which does NOT reflect valid conditional reasoning?

A)deny the antecedent
B)modus tollens
C)modus ponens
D)deny the consequent
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
__________ is(are)defined as "mental representations of meanings of the terms in reasoning problems."

A)Formal logic
B)Venn diagrams
C)Mental models
D)Semantic networks
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Johnson-Laird argued that __________.

A)Humans cannot use formal logic
B)Humans use mental models of the described state of affairs
C)Human decision making is intrinsically connected to language skills
D)Human decision making relies on explicit hypothesis testing
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
__________ is the study of the relationship between physical stimuli and the perceived characteristics of those stimuli: the study of how perceptual experience differs from the physical stimulation being perceived.

A)Simulation heurisitc
B)Naïve physics
C)JND
D)Psychophysics
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
Consider this problem.What does it represent? Premise 1: If it is a weekend,Mark is sailing.
Premise 2: Mark is sailing.
Conclusion: It is a weekend.

A)syllogistic reasoning
B)affirm the antecedent
C)illicit conversion
D)deny the antecedent
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Making judgments about which is smaller-a "1" or a "2" versus a "1" or a "4"-will illustrate __________.

A)the symbolic congruity effect
B)the Stroop effect
C)the imagery effect
D)the symbolic distance effect
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
There are two hospitals; one averages 45 births per day,the other 15 births per day.You are asked,"In any given year,which hospital will have a higher percentage of days during which more than 60 percent of the babies born will be male?" The correct answer is __________.

A)the "45" hospital
B)the "15" hospital
C)that there is an equal chance of either
D)that there is insufficient information provided (thus,we cannot answer the question)
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
Asking a subject to judge which set of clock hands produces a larger angle-"3:20 or 7:25" and then "2:15 or 9:20"-produces all but __________.

A)symbolic distance effect
B)evidence for the use of visual imagery
C)the semantic congruity effect
D)slower response times for "3:20 vs.7:25" than for "2:15 vs.9:20"
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Kahneman & Tversky (1973)report having people read various personality descriptions and then estimate the likelihood or probability that a person was a member of one or another profession.To a surprising degree,people's estimates are influenced by the similarity of the description to a widely held stereotype.This reflects __________.

A)the availability heuristic
B)general world knowledge
C)the vividness effect
D)the representativeness heuristic
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
The amount of change required for people to detect the change is __________.

A)JND
B)Weber's constant
C)Helmholtz's equation
D)Fechner's phallia
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
A heuristic is __________.

A)a specific rule or solution procedure that is certain to yield the correct answer if followed correctly
B)an informal "rule of thumb" method for solving problems,not necessarily guaranteed to solve the problem correctly,but usually much faster or more tractable than other alternatives
C)the act of someone who reasons; to think logically; to analyze with reason
D)the mental representation of meaning in a reasoning problem
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Decisions about size differences are sped up when the stimuli differ by a greater amount.This reflects __________.

A)JND
B)distance effect
C)discriminability index
D)spatial cueing
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
An algorithm is __________.

A)a specific rule or solution procedure that is certain to yield the correct answer if followed correctly
B)an informal "rule of thumb" method for solving problems,not necessarily guaranteed to solve the problem correctly,but usually much faster or more tractable than other alternatives
C)the act of someone who reasons; to think logically; to analyze with reason
D)the mental representation of meaning in a reasoning problem
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
In the __________,knowledge from a variety of sources is factored into a decision (e.g.,Chicago judged north of Rome based on "Northern North America" vs."Southern Europe").

A)symbolic distance effect
B)semantic imagery effect
C)semantic congruity effect
D)plausible reasoning hypothesis
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
A heuristic is to __________ as an algorithm is to __________.

A)correct; incorrect
B)incorrect; correct
C)likelihood; certainty
D)certainty; likelihood
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Make a judgment about which is rounder: an apple or a pear versus a toothpick or an oar.The difference between these judgments will illustrate __________.

A)the semantic congruity effect
B)the von Restorff effect
C)the imagery effect
D)the recency effect
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 98 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Consider this pair of judgments about which is smaller: "Which is smaller,a sheep or a bear?" and "Which is smaller,a mouse or a rat?" The faster response to the second question illustrates __________.

A)the semantic congruity effect
B)the imagery effect
C)the number magnitude effect
D)the symbolic distance effect
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33
Consider the following problem and then choose which of the statements below is NOT true. If each of 10 people at a meeting shakes hands (once)with every other person,how many handshakes are exchanged?

A)The descriptive model might be "Ten people shaking hands with nine folks each… a couple fewer because you want to avoid repetitions ...say something like maybe sixty to seventy?"
B)The normative method will yield the "correct" answer: in this case,N x ((N-1)/2).
C)A heuristic approach is not necessarily systematic or orderly,instead relying on educated guessing.
D)The algorithmic approach will differ substantially from the normative model of what is "right"; that is,it is particularly prone to distortions,inaccuracies,and omissions.
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34
RT is longer for the comparison "a whale is a fish" than for "a whale is a bird." This reflects __________.

A)the semantic congruity effect
B)the Stroop effect
C)the imagery effect
D)the symbolic distance effect
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35
A reasoning heuristic in which we judge the likelihood of some event by deciding how much that event seems to be like the larger group or population from which it was drawn is a(n)__________.

A)association heuristic
B)availability heuristic
C)normative heuristic
D)representativeness heuristic
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36
Using this picture and asking "Which {balloon // yo-yo} is higher" (the example from the text)will illustrate __________. <strong>Using this picture and asking Which {balloon // yo-yo} is higher (the example from the text)will illustrate __________.  </strong> A)the symbolic distance effect B)the semantic congruity effect C)the fact that decisions about size differences are sped up when the stimuli differ by a greater amount D)the magnitude effect

A)the symbolic distance effect
B)the semantic congruity effect
C)the fact that decisions about size differences are sped up when the stimuli differ by a greater amount
D)the magnitude effect
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37
Which is NOT true of judgments of number magnitude?

A)The larger the difference between the digits,the faster the judgments are made.
B)Just as in psychophysics,the psychological difference is a direct function of physical difference.
C)Judgment time is affected by semantic congruity.
D)When people make mental comparisons and judgments of purely symbolic quantities,there is a pronounced semantic distance effect.
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38
The belief that small samples will be representative of the population from which they are selected is __________.

A)the law of large numbers
B)the central limit theorem
C)the fallacy law of small numbers
D)called sensitivity to sample size
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39
The bias or heuristic that includes the law of small numbers is __________.

A) veracity bias
B) availability heuristic
C) representativeness heuristic
D) confirmation bias
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40
The representativeness heuristic is a bias to make decisions based on __________.

A)how closely one outcome resembles the population of possible outcomes
B)whether an option is represented in the set of possible outcomes
C)how well one can represent the choice to other people
D)the degree to which a choice represents a correct answer
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41
When we alter an unusual story element,substituting a more typical or normal element in its place,we refer to this as reflecting __________.

A)the simulation heuristic
B)downhill change
C)uphill change
D)the familiarity bias
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42
Which of the following represented a "belief" effect?

A)Clinical psychologists deviate from the DSM-IV based on their personal views of cause-effect relations.
B)Israeli students tend to judge simultaneous events in history from Europe as occurring before the matched event in North America.
C)the confirmation bias
D)all of the above
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43
In the three months following the 9/11 attack on the World Trade Center buildings in New York City,the rate of traffic fatalities increased by about 350 people.This increase was most likely due to the operation of __________.

A)the effect of sample size
B)the familiarity bias
C)the salience bias
D)the representativeness heuristic
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44
When doing counterfactual thinking,what kind of change is the easiest to imagine and then base decisions upon?

A)uphill
B)downhill
C)transverse
D)inverted
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45
__________ is a decision-making strategy based on the ease of retrieval from memory.

A)Representativeness heuristic
B)Retrieval effect
C)Availability heuristic
D)Algorithm
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46
Sometimes people make decision-making errors because of limited __________.

A)heuristics
B)domain knowledge
C)algorithms
D)imagination
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47
The mistaken belief that a compound outcome of two characteristics can be more likely than either one of the characteristics by itself is __________.

A)the conjunction fallacy
B)the compound bias
C)the law of small numbers error
D)satisficing
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48
If you make a decision about what most households in the country are like by thinking about what your college friends are like,you are succumbing to the __________ heuristic.

A)representativeness
B)retrieval
C)availability
D)belief bias
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49
The simulation heuristic involves __________.

A)running a computer simulation of human cognitive decision making
B)imagining the outcome of your own actions
C)making a model of the event to help your decision making
D)imaging other possible outcomes of an event
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50
Judging events as more frequent or important just because they are more familiar in memory illustrates __________.

A)familiarity bias
B)salience bias
C)vividness bias
D)the effect of general world knowledge
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51
Two groups of participants read identical stories that differed in their endings: meeting a new person and having the story end in a marriage proposal,a rape scenario,or,as a control,a neutral ending (Carli,1999).People __________.

A)showed no difference in the accuracy of their recall for story elements
B)in both experimental groups reported "being able to predict" how the story would end
C)in both experimental groups illustrated undoing effects
D)showed evidence for semantic congruency effects in recall
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52
The anchoring and adjustment effect most likely reflects the __________.

A)representativeness heuristic
B)scope ratio
C)availability heuristic
D)simulation heuristic
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53
Making a decision based on ease of retrieval of relevant examples from memory (e.g.,the "words with K in the first/third position" example)is __________.This is an informal approach that can be extremely useful in many situations,but it sometimes produces the wrong answer.

A)representativeness heuristic
B)Bayes' theorem
C)availability heuristic
D)all of the above
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54
A German sample was better at (correctly)identifying that San Diego was more populous than San Antonio than a U.S.sample.This result is best described as reflecting __________.

A)the chronic underfunding of the U.S.educational system
B)the recognition heuristic
C)the frequency heuristic
D)the simulation heuristic
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55
Stereotypes are a reflection,in part,of the __________ heuristic.

A)availability
B)representativeness
C)belief bias
D)prejudice
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56
The argument that there is a central flaw in heuristics and bias research-that it is a mistake to assume that the correct answer to any decision-making problem must be the normative answer supplied by classic probability theory-is __________.

A)counterfactual thinking
B)inductive rationalization
C)adaptive thinking
D)recognition heuristic
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57
__________ is(are)defined as people's misconceptions of the physical world,in particular their understanding of the principles of motion.

A)Simulation heuristic
B)Mental models
C)Naïve physics
D)Self-conceptualization of beliefs
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58
Recent research suggests that what sort of reasoning might be influencing how people make decisions?

A)political
B)religious
C)temporal
D)causal
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59
Kahneman & Tversky (1973)report having people read various personality descriptions and then estimate the likelihood or probability that a person was a member of one or another profession.They report __________.

A)good use of prior odds in the "bare bones" situation
B)that stereotypic information biased the reported likelihood in the direction of the stereotype
C)that worthless information did not bias the reported likelihood; prior probabilities were retained unless the information was consistent with a stereotype
D)that the descriptive model deviated strongly from the normative model
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60
In terms of undoing,which is most involved?

A)tending to maintain properties of the main object or focus of the story unless a different focus is provided
B)satisficing
C)the law of small numbers
D)counterfactual thinking driven by availability and frequency effects
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61
If a conclusion matches the first mental model derived from the problem,it is particularly easy (and thus likely)to accept the (potentially false)conclusion,leading to fallacies or errors in reasoning.
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62
The strongest logical test of a scientific theory is to see if the hypothesized effects are produced in accordance with the theoretical predictions.
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63
Denying the consequent leads to a valid inference.
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64
The difference in "guestimate" answers for 8x7x6x5x4x3x2x1 versus 1x2x3x4x5x6x7x8 reveals __________.

A)the prototypicality heuristic
B)the simulation heuristic
C)the availability heuristic
D)the recognition heuristic
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65
In judgments of "bigness," "8 vs.12" will be judged more quickly than "8 vs.9."
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66
The subjective experience of magnitude is a direct function of the amount of physical stimulation.
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67
The "roadrunner effect" (dropping off a cliff)reflects __________.

A)naïve physics
B)ambiguity
C)counterfactual reasoning
D)downhill change
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68
Geography questions can show semantic congruity and symbolic distance effects.
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69
In general,research evidence indicates that people act as rational decision makers.
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70
Affirming the antecedent does not lead to a valid inference.
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71
In conditional reasoning,the confirmation bias is a search error.
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72
In conditional reasoning,an illicit conversion is a form error.
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73
In statistics,we test against the null hypothesis in hopes that our evidence will be inconsistent with the predicted "no effect" outcome.
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74
When hypothesis testing with increasingly complex if-then relations,the typical mistake is to search for positive,confirming evidence.
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75
Adults often will not demonstrate formal or abstract reasoning processes when presented with abstract problems.
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76
The psychological distance between small numbers is compressed relative to the psychological difference between large numbers.)
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77
Naïve physics refers to __________.

A)errors in physical reasoning
B)early learning of physical principles
C)counterfactual reasoning
D)our implicit understanding of the physical world
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78
It is incorrect to think of human decision making as a search for evidence.
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79
Using concrete rather than abstract concepts tends to improve reasoning accuracy.
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80
Mental models exist only for concrete systems.
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