Probability
Confidence
Strategy
Prospects
Framing
100

When we think of our current problem as a member of a category of many similar problems, are we taking an Outside or Inside View?

Outside View

100

What do we call the degree to which our confidence maps on to accuracy?

Calibration

100

Strategies that involve across-attribute trade offs between alternatives are called what?

Compensatory

100

What is the position (0,0) on the value function representing?

The Reference Point

100

In what type of frame are people usually risk-seeking?

A Loss Frame

200

What type of probability do we call the likelihood of two simple events both occurring?

Conjunctive Probability

200

Why is the idea of a "hot hand" in basketball often fallacious?

Regression to the mean

200

When will a decision task require more cognitive effort?

Answer one of these:

-Large choice sets

-Necessary trade-offs across alternatives

-A lack of critical information

-Having many similar alternatives

200
At what probability are people well-calibrated when determining decision weights?

Around 0.20

200

In the 'General Problem', when are people typically risk-averse?

When the problem is framed as saving lives, opposed to losing lives.

300

In the Monty Hall Problem, what is the probability that you will receive the car if you switch to the other door?

2/3

300

When plotting confidence, how would we describe the data points that fall below the slanted dotted line? (i.e., over or under confident)

Over-confident

300

Which decision strategies (categorically) are susceptible to Order Effects?

Non-Exhaustive Strategies

300

Why is the value function curve steeper moving left from the reference point, as opposed to right?

Loss Aversion (i.e., losses are weighted greater than gains)

300

What do we call the phenomenon in which people ascribe more value to things simply because they own them?

The Endowment Effect

400

Explain the denominator in Bayes' formula.

P(B) is the independent probability of B occurring, regardless if A occurs or not. 

400

According to the Hard-Easy Effect, what types of questions often lead to under-confidence?

Easy Questions

400

What is the most cognitively demanding decision strategy?

Additive Linear, or

Multi-attribute Utility Theory

400

How do we determine the value of a Prospect?

The overall value of a prospect is equal to the sum of all its individual values multiplied by their decision weights

400

Framing Effects often use "Reference Point Manipulation" to affect the perception of potential outcomes. What axiom of rationality does this violate?

Axiom of Invariance

500

In what type of probability are we are trying to account for the "inclusive or" between events?

Disjunction

500

When are Better than Average (BTA) and Worse than Average (WTA) effects the strongest? 

When we are confident about our own performances but unsure about others.

500

What is the difference between the Conjunctive (i.e., Satisficing) and the Disjunctive decision strategies?

In Conjunctive, you select based upon finding an alternative that meet the cut-offs on all attributes. In Disjunctive, you select based upon finding an alternative that meets the cut-off on any attribute.

500

Why does is make sense to combine/segregate our outcomes?

We are more sensitive gains/losses near our reference point. Segregating gains and grouping losses can increase overall satisfaction.

500

How does buying insurance demonstrate a departure from typical framing effects?

People are usually risk seeking in a loss frame. However, with phone insurance, most people take the sure loss of $50 to avoid the potential (i.e., risk) of losing $200 in the future.