Reid Hastie
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Wiser: Getting Beyond Groupthink to Make Groups Smarter
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2014
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5 editions
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Rational Choice in an Uncertain World: The Psychology of Judgement and Decision Making
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published
1988
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11 editions
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Punitive Damages: How Juries Decide
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published
2002
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8 editions
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Inside the Jury
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published
1983
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8 editions
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不确定世界的理性选择:判断与决策心理学(第2版) (社会心理学精品译丛) (Chinese Edition)
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Person Memory (PLE: Memory)
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published
2014
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8 editions
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Inside the Juror: The Psychology of Juror Decision Making (Cambridge Series on Judgment and Decision Making)
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published
1993
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4 editions
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不确定世界的理性选择
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Klokere
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INSTITUCION DEL JURADO EN LOS ESTADOS UNIDOS, LA
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“We take the position that research - not anecdotes, not "plausible beliefs", not common sense, and not our everyday experience - should be the basis for understanding and evaluating our decision-making achievements and defeats.”
― Rational Choice in an Uncertain World: The Psychology of Judgement and Decision Making
― Rational Choice in an Uncertain World: The Psychology of Judgement and Decision Making
“Sociologist Barry Glassner (1999) has documented many of the biases introduced by “If it bleeds, it leads” news reporting, and by the strategic efforts of special interest groups to control the agenda of public fear of crime, disease, and other hazards. Is an increase of approximately 700 incidents in 50 states over 7 years an “epidemic” of road rage? Is it conceivable that there is (or ever was) a crisis in children’s day care stemming from predatory satanic cults? In 1994, a research team funded by the U.S. government spent 4 years and $750,000 to reach the conclusion that the myth of satanic conspiracies in day care centers was totally unfounded; not a single verified instance was found (Goodman, Qin, Bottoms, & Shaver, 1994; Nathan & Snedeker, 1995). Are automatic-weapon-toting high school students really the first priority in youth safety? (In 1999, approximately 2,000 school-aged children were identified as murder victims; only 26 of those died in school settings, 14 of them in one tragic incident at Columbine High School in Littleton, Colorado.) The anthropologist Mary Douglas (Douglas & Wildavsky, 1982) pointed out that every culture has a store of exaggerated horrors, many of them promoted by special interest factions or to defend cultural ideologies. For example, impure water had been a hazard in 14th-century Europe, but only after Jews were accused of poisoning wells did the citizenry become preoccupied with it as a major problem.
But the original news reports are not always ill-motivated. We all tend to code and mention characteristics that are unusual (that occur infrequently). [...] The result is that the frequencies of these distinctive characteristics, among the class of people considered, tend to be overestimated.”
― Rational Choice in an Uncertain World: The Psychology of Judgement and Decision Making
But the original news reports are not always ill-motivated. We all tend to code and mention characteristics that are unusual (that occur infrequently). [...] The result is that the frequencies of these distinctive characteristics, among the class of people considered, tend to be overestimated.”
― Rational Choice in an Uncertain World: The Psychology of Judgement and Decision Making
“A more serious consequence of the illusion of control is revealed in our preference for driving over flying. At least part of this irrational—from a survival point of view—habit is due to the fact that we “feel in control” when driving, but not when flying. The probability of dying in a cross-country flight is approximately equal to the probability of dying in a 12-mile drive— in many cases, the most dangerous part of the trip is over when you reach the airport (Sivak & Flannagan, 2003). Gerd Gigerenzer (2006) estimates that the post-9/11 shift from flying to driving in the United States resulted in an additional 1,500 deaths, beyond the original 3,000 immediate victims of the terrorist attacks.”
― Rational Choice in an Uncertain World: The Psychology of Judgement and Decision Making
― Rational Choice in an Uncertain World: The Psychology of Judgement and Decision Making
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