Think! Evidence

On the Relative Independence of Thinking Biases and Cognitive Ability

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dc.contributor.author Stanovich, K E
dc.contributor.author West, R F
dc.date.accessioned 2015-09-24T14:15:19Z
dc.date.available 2015-09-24T14:15:19Z
dc.date.issued 2008
dc.identifier.uri http://evidence.thinkportal.org/handle/123456789/31561
dc.identifier.uri http://psycnet.apa.org/journals/psp/94/4/672/
dc.description.abstract In 7 different studies, the authors observed that a large number of thinking biases are uncorrelated with cognitive ability. These thinking biases include some of the most classic and well-studied biases in the heuristics and biases literature, including the conjunction effect, framing effects, anchoring effects, outcome bias, base-rate neglect, "less is more" effects, affect biases, omission bias, myside bias, sunk-cost effect, and certainty effects that violate the axioms of expected utility theory. In a further experiment, the authors nonetheless showed that cognitive ability does correlate with the tendency to avoid some rational thinking biases, specifically the tendency to display denominator neglect, probability matching rather than maximizing, belief bias, and matching bias on the 4-card selection task. The authors present a framework for predicting when cognitive ability will and will not correlate with a rational thinking tendency. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Journal of Personality and Social Psychology en_US
dc.subject cognition, cognitive ability, biases, thinking en_US
dc.title On the Relative Independence of Thinking Biases and Cognitive Ability en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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