| bio | website | |
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| location | ||
| age | ||
| visits | member for | 1 year, 3 months |
| seen | May 20 at 23:28 | |
| stats | profile views | 4 |
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May 20 |
comment |
When can anchoring backfire? @JakeWestfall In my actual study, the decision was dichotomous, so people were either 100% right or 100% wrong for each judgment. Each individual's accuracy rate is the proportion of accurate responses over several judgments. So, if you got 3 out of 4 right, you had a 75% accuracy rate. Then, I compared the mean accuracy rates between the two groups. |
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May 20 |
comment |
When can anchoring backfire? True, it is not a classic anchoring scenario. |
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May 17 |
comment |
Aesthetic preference for even or odd numbers I'd add that we have 5 fingers on a hand which likely also influences it's popularity. We use base-10 probably because we have 10 fingers. |
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May 17 |
asked | When can anchoring backfire? |
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May 17 |
accepted | Method for evaluating how emotionally evocative a question is? |
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May 17 |
accepted | What factors influence a person's perceived expertise? |
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Feb 14 |
awarded | Yearling |
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Dec 10 |
asked | What factors influence a person's perceived expertise? |
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Jul 9 |
comment |
What constructs help explain limited cognitive processing and the cognitive effects of rules that limit decision making choices? Lots to think about! I appreciate the response. |
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Jul 9 |
accepted | What constructs help explain limited cognitive processing and the cognitive effects of rules that limit decision making choices? |
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Jun 28 |
awarded | Nice Question |
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Jun 20 |
revised |
What constructs help explain limited cognitive processing and the cognitive effects of rules that limit decision making choices? clarified title |
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Jun 20 |
awarded | Editor |
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Jun 20 |
comment |
Method for evaluating how emotionally evocative a question is? @BenBrocka - I like the idea. I don't have access to an fMRI right now, but it seems like it would be feasible to validate instruments using one. |
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Jun 20 |
revised |
Method for evaluating how emotionally evocative a question is? Clarified emotion vs emotional arousal. |
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Jun 20 |
comment |
Method for evaluating how emotionally evocative a question is? @JohnPick - Right now, I'm not interested in differentiating between emotions. I don't care if somebody is angry or frightened, as long as the arousal is high. I'd probably flag somebody if they showed very high arousal to a question when compared to their peers, or to their individual baseline of responses to benign questions. Hope that helps. |
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Jun 20 |
asked | What constructs help explain limited cognitive processing and the cognitive effects of rules that limit decision making choices? |
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Apr 9 |
asked | Method for evaluating how emotionally evocative a question is? |
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Feb 15 |
awarded | Scholar |
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Feb 15 |
accepted | Is it easier for people to remember longer words than words mixed with symbols? |