A) hindsight bias.
B) my-side bias.
C) the crystal-ball technique.
D) the conjunction rule.
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Multiple Choice
A) the availability heuristic.
B) the anchoring and adjustment heuristic.
C) the representativeness heuristic.
D) the recognition heuristic.
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Multiple Choice
A) John's estimate probably relies too heavily on the ease with which examples come to mind.
B) John is likely to be heavily influenced by the confirmation bias.
C) John probably relied too heavily on the initial anchor of 100 students.
D) John probably would have been wiser to use the representativeness heuristic to estimate the confidence intervals.
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Multiple Choice
A) Barbara: "The availability heuristic is actually very accurate, and it almost always leads us to the correct decision."
B) Harley: "The availability heuristic is generally accurate, but recency and familiarity can distort our decisions."
C) Angela: "The availability heuristic is generally accurate, except that we should be cautious about the recognition heuristic, which is not very accurate."
D) Magda: "Unfortunately, the availability heuristic is the least accurate of the three major heuristics, especially because of the hindsight bias."
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Multiple Choice
A) The confirmation bias
B) Illusory correlation
C) Law of small numbers
D) The my-side bias
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Multiple Choice
A) provide estimates that are too wide.
B) rely too heavily on the representativeness heuristic.
C) are not sufficiently confident about their decisions.
D) provide estimates that are too narrow.
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Multiple Choice
A) the conjunction fallacy.
B) the relationship between illusory correlations and the representativeness heuristic.
C) anchoring and adjustment.
D) the tendency for recency to influence availability.
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Multiple Choice
A) People usually don't pay enough attention to base rate when making these decisions.
B) People are so aware of information about base rate that they typically make accurate decisions.
C) People rarely make the small-sample fallacy when making these decisions.
D) When people have a background in statistics, they are much more likely to make correct decisions on tasks involving the representativeness heuristic.
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Multiple Choice
A) under some circumstances, the framework of a question encourages too much reliance on the representativeness heuristic.
B) when people make decisions, the deep structure-or frame-is more important than the surface structure.
C) decision-makers show a clear-cut tendency to assume that the same frame holds true for all the decisions in a particular set.
D) the way in which a question is asked has an important influence on people's decisions.
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Multiple Choice
A) people consistently seek out negative information rather than positive information.
B) the problem is easier to solve if it describes something concrete, such as drinking age.
C) this is one of the few tasks that people can solve more accurately in their heads than when the problem is represented with concrete objects.
D) people are systematically influenced by the representativeness heuristic.
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Multiple Choice
A) propositional reasoning.
B) problem solving.
C) decision making.
D) a syllogism.
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Multiple Choice
A) the tutoring center and the external firm emphasize the number of students to be "saved" in their presentations
B) the tutoring center and the external firm emphasize the number of students who will be suspended under each of their programs
C) the tutoring center emphasizes the potential number of students to be suspended, while the external firm emphasizes the potential number of students saved from suspension
D) both the tutoring center and the external firm place equal emphasis on the students to be "saved" and the students who will be suspended under each approach
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Multiple Choice
A) decision making.
B) insightful problem solving.
C) divergent thinking.
D) deductive reasoning.
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Multiple Choice
A) representativeness
B) availability
C) anchoring and adjustment
D) default
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Multiple Choice
A) Tim: "Illusory correlations arise when people focus their attention on only one set of characteristics, and they do not consider the other sets of characteristics."
B) Joanne: "Illusory correlations are based on the inappropriate use of confidence intervals."
C) Sophie: "Illusory correlations resemble the conjunction fallacy, in which we believe that two psychological characteristics or categories are related to each other."
D) Ingo: "Actually, a recent meta-analysis showed that-ironically-illusory correlations are illusory."
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Multiple Choice
A) this heuristic is consistently more accurate than the representativeness heuristic.
B) we use this heuristic when we try to estimate probability by thinking of relevant examples.
C) this heuristic emphasizes that we ignore the conjunction fallacy.
D) this heuristic explains why we typically provide confidence intervals that are too narrow.
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Multiple Choice
A) demonstrated confirmation bias.
B) relied too heavily on the belief-bias effect.
C) relied too heavily on counterexamples.
D) overused the availability heuristic.
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Multiple Choice
A) anchoring and adjustment.
B) an illusory correlation.
C) representativeness.
D) availability.
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Multiple Choice
A) use the crystal-ball technique.
B) use the meta-analysis technique.
C) emphasize that the employees should try to find more information that confirms their beliefs, rather than disconfirming those beliefs.
D) emphasize that the employees need to review the principles of propositional calculus.
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Multiple Choice
A) A syllogism
B) Conditional reasoning
C) Propositional reasoning
D) The availability heuristic
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