EFFECTS OF EXPECTANCY ON ASSESSING COVARIATION IN DATA - PRIOR BELIEF VERSUS MEANING

被引:21
作者
BILLMAN, D [1 ]
BORNSTEIN, B [1 ]
RICHARDS, J [1 ]
机构
[1] UNIV PENN,PHILADELPHIA,PA 19104
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
D O I
10.1016/0749-5978(92)90055-C
中图分类号
B849 [应用心理学];
学科分类号
040203 ;
摘要
A large number of researchers have addressed the question of how prior beliefs affect assessment of covariation in new data. Some have suggested that prior beliefs disrupt covariation assessment (Nisbett & Ross, 1980), while others have claimed they help (Wright & Murphy, 1984). Research in this tradition has not consistently distinguished meaningfulness of the data from expectations about the particular relationship between the variables to be assessed. We collected covariance judgments on meaningful variable pairs where subjects had a prior belief in a positive relation, had a prior belief in a negative relation, had a prior belief that the variables are unrelated, or were agnostic about the existence or nature of relation. Subjects rated data with negative, positive, and zero correlations. We evaluated performance in terms of subjects' ability to discriminate objectively different correlations, rather than simply comparing to a reference statistic, and also on the bias subjects showed. Subjects with no prior belief, with positive beliefs, and with negative beliefs were all reasonably well able to discriminate among different objective correlations. In addition, subjects with no prior belief showed appropriate use of the judgment scale, while those having a positive or negative expectation were biased in the direction of their prior belief. In contrast, subjects with the prior belief that the variables were unrelated showed essentially no discrimination. Our results disconfirm the hypothesis that prior beliefs generally facilitate correlation assessment of summarized data. Judgments of meaningful data were best when subjects were initially agnostic. © 1992.
引用
收藏
页码:74 / 88
页数:15
相关论文
共 27 条
[1]   ASSESSMENT OF COVARIATION BY HUMANS AND ANIMALS - THE JOINT INFLUENCE OF PRIOR EXPECTATIONS AND CURRENT SITUATIONAL INFORMATION [J].
ALLOY, LB ;
TABACHNIK, N .
PSYCHOLOGICAL REVIEW, 1984, 91 (01) :112-149
[2]   EFFECTS OF EXPLANATION AND COUNTER-EXPLANATION ON THE DEVELOPMENT AND USE OF SOCIAL THEORIES [J].
ANDERSON, CA ;
SECHLER, ES .
JOURNAL OF PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1986, 50 (01) :24-34
[3]   GENESIS OF POPULAR BUT ERRONEOUS PSYCHO-DIAGNOSTIC OBSERVATIONS [J].
CHAPMAN, LJ ;
CHAPMAN, JP .
JOURNAL OF ABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1967, 72 (03) :193-&
[4]   ILLUSORY CORRELATION AS AN OBSTACLE TO USE OF VALID PSYCHODIAGNOSTIC SIGNS [J].
CHAPMAN, LJ ;
CHAPMAN, JP .
JOURNAL OF ABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1969, 74 (03) :271-&
[5]   PRAGMATIC REASONING SCHEMAS [J].
CHENG, PW ;
HOLYOAK, KJ .
COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY, 1985, 17 (04) :391-416
[6]  
COHEN CE, 1981, J PERS SOC PSYCHOL, V40, P441
[7]   JUDGMENT OF COVARIATION BY SOCIAL PERCEIVERS [J].
CROCKER, J .
PSYCHOLOGICAL BULLETIN, 1981, 90 (02) :272-292
[8]  
GREEN DM, 1966, SIGNAL DETECTION THE
[9]   THE ELUSIVE THEMATIC-MATERIALS EFFECT IN WASON SELECTION TASK [J].
GRIGGS, RA ;
COX, JR .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 1982, 73 (AUG) :407-420
[10]  
JENNINGS DL, 1982, JUDGEMENT UNCERTAINT