TY - JOUR
T1 - Intuitive judgments of social statistics
T2 - How exhaustive does sampling need to be?
AU - Pachur, Thorsten
AU - Hertwig, Ralph
AU - Rieskamp, Jörg
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Florian Steinmann for collecting the data in Study 1, Henrik Olsson and Lael Schooler for their many constructive comments, and Laura Wiles, Valerie Chase, and Susannah Goss for editing the manuscript. This research was supported by a grant from the German Research Foundation (DFG) as part of the priority program “New Frameworks of Rationality” (SPP 1516) to Ralph Hertwig and Thorsten Pachur ( HE 2768/7-1 ).
PY - 2013/11
Y1 - 2013/11
N2 - One way to make inferences about social statistics, such as the frequencies of health risks in the population, is to probe relevant instances in one's social network. People can infer, for instance, the relative frequency of different diseases by probing how many members of their social network suffer from them. How are such instance-based inferences cognitively implemented? Noncompensatory strategies based on lexicographic and limited search have been extensively examined in the context of cue-based inference. Their role in instance-based inference, by contrast, has received scant attention. We propose the social-circle heuristic as a model of noncompensatory instance-based inference entailing lexicographic and limited search, and test its descriptive and prescriptive implications: To what extent do people rely on the social-circle heuristic? How accurate is the noncompensatory heuristic relative to a compensatory strategy when inferring event frequencies? Two empirical studies show that the heuristic accurately predicts the judgments of a substantial portion of participants. A response time analysis also supports the assumption of lexicographic search: The earlier the heuristic predicted search to be terminated, the faster participants classified as using the social-circle heuristic responded. Using computer simulations to systematically investigate the heuristic's prescriptive implications, we find that despite its limited search, the heuristic can approximate the accuracy of a compensatory strategy in skewed and in spatially clustered environments-both common properties of distributions in real-world social environments.
AB - One way to make inferences about social statistics, such as the frequencies of health risks in the population, is to probe relevant instances in one's social network. People can infer, for instance, the relative frequency of different diseases by probing how many members of their social network suffer from them. How are such instance-based inferences cognitively implemented? Noncompensatory strategies based on lexicographic and limited search have been extensively examined in the context of cue-based inference. Their role in instance-based inference, by contrast, has received scant attention. We propose the social-circle heuristic as a model of noncompensatory instance-based inference entailing lexicographic and limited search, and test its descriptive and prescriptive implications: To what extent do people rely on the social-circle heuristic? How accurate is the noncompensatory heuristic relative to a compensatory strategy when inferring event frequencies? Two empirical studies show that the heuristic accurately predicts the judgments of a substantial portion of participants. A response time analysis also supports the assumption of lexicographic search: The earlier the heuristic predicted search to be terminated, the faster participants classified as using the social-circle heuristic responded. Using computer simulations to systematically investigate the heuristic's prescriptive implications, we find that despite its limited search, the heuristic can approximate the accuracy of a compensatory strategy in skewed and in spatially clustered environments-both common properties of distributions in real-world social environments.
KW - Availability
KW - Decision strategy
KW - Frequency
KW - Heuristics
KW - Sampling
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84882782102&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.jesp.2013.07.004
DO - 10.1016/j.jesp.2013.07.004
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84882782102
SN - 0022-1031
VL - 49
SP - 1059
EP - 1077
JO - Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
JF - Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
IS - 6
ER -