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Garcia-Retamero, Rocio; Galesic, Mirta – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 2012
Doctors often make decisions for their patients and predict their patients' preferences and decisions to customize advice to their particular situation. We investigated how doctors make decisions about medical treatments for their patients and themselves and how they predict their patients' decisions. We also studied whether these decisions and…
Descriptors: Medical Services, Outcomes of Treatment, Patients, Decision Making
Joslyn, Susan L.; LeClerc, Jared E. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 2012
Although uncertainty is inherent in weather forecasts, explicit numeric uncertainty estimates are rarely included in public forecasts for fear that they will be misunderstood. Of particular concern are situations in which precautionary action is required at low probabilities, often the case with severe events. At present, a categorical weather…
Descriptors: Prediction, Decision Making, Probability, Experiments
Hepler, Teri J.; Feltz, Deborah L. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 2012
Can taking the first (TTF) option in decision-making lead to the best decisions in sports contexts? And, is one's decision-making self-efficacy in that context linked to TTF decisions? The purpose of this study was to examine the role of the TTF heuristic and self-efficacy in decision-making on a simulated sports task. Undergraduate and graduate…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Graduate Students, Team Sports, Self Efficacy
Fischhoff, Baruch; Gonzalez, Roxana M.; Lerner, Jennifer S.; Small, Deborah A. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 2012
The authors examined the evolution of cognitive and emotional responses to terror risks for a nationally representative sample of Americans between late 2001 and late 2002. Respondents' risk judgments changed in ways consistent with their reported personal experiences. However, they did not recognize these changes, producing hindsight bias in…
Descriptors: Priming, Psychological Studies, Emotional Response, Risk
Frowd, Charlie D.; Skelton, Faye; Atherton, Chris; Pitchford, Melanie; Hepton, Gemma; Holden, Laura; McIntyre, Alex H.; Hancock, Peter J. B. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 2012
Recognition memory for unfamiliar faces is facilitated when contextual cues (e.g., head pose, background environment, hair and clothing) are consistent between study and test. By contrast, inconsistencies in external features, especially hair, promote errors in unfamiliar face-matching tasks. For the construction of facial composites, as carried…
Descriptors: Victims of Crime, Cues, Evaluators, Recognition (Psychology)
Munzer, Stefan; Zimmer, Hubert D.; Baus, Jorg – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 2012
Current GPS-based mobile navigation assistance systems support wayfinding, but they do not support learning about the spatial configuration of an environment. The present study examined effects of visual presentation modes for navigation assistance on wayfinding accuracy, route learning, and configural learning. Participants (high-school students)…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Maps, Short Term Memory, Spatial Ability
Chen, Fu-Chen; Stoffregen, Thomas A. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 2012
Mariners actively adjust their body orientation in response to ship motion. On a ship at sea, we evaluated relations between standing postural activity and the performance of a precision aiming task. Standing participants (experienced mariners) maintained the beam from a handheld laser on a target. Targets were large or small, thereby varying the…
Descriptors: Workstations, Cognitive Processes, Task Analysis, Priming
Gorman, Jamie C.; Cooke, Nancy J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 2011
This paper examines the retention of team cognition with changes in team membership. Hypotheses are developed from shared cognition and interactive team cognition theories. We report a study of the effects of Short (3-6 weeks) versus Long (10-13 weeks) retention intervals and change (Mixed) versus no change (Intact) in team membership during the…
Descriptors: Intervals, Teamwork, Program Effectiveness, Retention (Psychology)
Szalma, James L.; Taylor, Grant S. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 2011
This study examined the relationship of operator personality (Five Factor Model) and characteristics of the task and of adaptive automation (reliability and adaptiveness--whether the automation was well-matched to changes in task demand) to operator performance, workload, stress, and coping. This represents the first investigation of how the Five…
Descriptors: Personality Traits, Coping, Automation, Individual Differences
Rogers, Todd; Norton, Michael I. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 2011
What happens when speakers try to "dodge" a question they would rather not answer by answering a different question? In 4 studies, we show that listeners can fail to detect dodges when speakers answer similar--but objectively incorrect--questions (the "artful dodge"), a detection failure that goes hand-in-hand with a failure to rate dodgers more…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Communication, Television, Questioning Techniques, Attention
Waterman, Amanda H.; Blades, Mark – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 2011
Adults ask children questions in a variety of contexts, for example, in the classroom, in the forensic context, or in experimental research. In such situations children will inevitably be asked some questions to which they do not know the answer, because they do not have the required information ("unanswerable" questions). When asked unanswerable…
Descriptors: Developmental Psychology, Adults, Children, Questioning Techniques
Kulatunga-Moruzi, Chan; Brooks, Lee R.; Norman, Geoffrey R. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 2011
It is believed that medical diagnosis involves two complementary processes, analytic and similarity-based. There is considerable debate as to which of these processes defines diagnostic expertise and how best to teach clinical diagnosis and reduce diagnostic errors. The purpose of these studies is to document the use of these strategies in medical…
Descriptors: Expertise, Medical Students, Clinical Diagnosis, Exhibits
Yamani, Yusuke; McCarley, Jason S. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 2010
Color and intensity coding provide perceptual cues to segregate categories of objects within a visual display, allowing operators to search more efficiently for needed information. Even within a perceptually distinct subset of display elements, however, it may often be useful to prioritize items representing urgent or task-critical information.…
Descriptors: Visual Stimuli, Cues, Experimental Psychology, Experiments
Dinner, Isaac; Johnson, Eric J.; Goldstein, Daniel G.; Liu, Kaiya – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 2011
Default options exert an influence in areas as varied as retirement program design, organ donation policy, and consumer choice. Past research has offered potential reasons why no-action defaults matter: (a) effort, (b) implied endorsement, and (c) reference dependence. The first two of these explanations have been experimentally demonstrated, but…
Descriptors: Program Design, Influences, Intervention, Theories
Bindemann, Markus; Avetisyan, Meri; Blackwell, Kristy-Ann – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 2010
Accurate person identification is central to all security, police, and judicial systems. A commonplace method to achieve this is to compare a photo-ID and the face of its purported owner. The critical aspect of this task is to spot cases in which these two instances of a face do not match. Studies of person identification show that these instances…
Descriptors: Courts, Identification, Observation, Task Analysis