Authors
An T Oskarsson, Leaf Van Boven, Gary H McClelland, Reid Hastie
Publication date
2009/3
Source
Psychological bulletin
Volume
135
Issue
2
Pages
262
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
The authors review research on judgments of random and nonrandom sequences involving binary events with a focus on studies documenting gambler's fallacy and hot hand beliefs. The domains of judgment include random devices, births, lotteries, sports performances, stock prices, and others. After discussing existing theories of sequence judgments, the authors conclude that in many everyday settings people have naive complex models of the mechanisms they believe generate observed events, and they rely on these models for explanations, predictions, and other inferences about event sequences. The authors next introduce an explanation-based, mental models framework for describing people's beliefs about binary sequences, based on 4 perceived characteristics of the sequence generator: randomness, intentionality, control, and goal complexity. Furthermore, they propose a Markov process framework as …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
AT Oskarsson, L Van Boven, GH McClelland, R Hastie - Psychological bulletin, 2009